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CLASS ACTION: COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION, RACE, AND THE POLITICS OF STUDENT ASSIGNMENT IN SAN FRANCISCO A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION AND THE COMMITTEE ON GRADUATE STUDIES OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Rand Quinn March 2011

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CLASS ACTION: COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION, RACE, AND THE

POLITICS OF STUDENT ASSIGNMENT IN SAN FRANCISCO

A DISSERTATION

SUBMITTED TO THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION

AND THE COMMITTEE ON GRADUATE STUDIES

OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY

IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS

FOR THE DEGREE OF

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY

Rand Quinn

March 2011

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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/

This dissertation is online at: http://purl.stanford.edu/xc705bk6458

2011 by Rand A Quinn. All Rights Reserved.

Re-distributed by Stanford University under license with the author.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

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I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.

Leah Gordon, Primary Adviser

I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.

Milbrey McLaughlin, Co-Adviser

I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.

Michael Kirst

I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.

Francisco Ramirez

Approved for the Stanford University Committee on Graduate Studies.

Patricia J. Gumport, Vice Provost Graduate Education

This signature page was generated electronically upon submission of this dissertation in electronic format. An original signed hard copy of the signature page is on file inUniversity Archives.

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Abstract

The principal goal of the dissertation is to explain the political nature and effect of

cultural characterizations on the development of student assignment policy. Cultural

characterizations are socially constructed portrayals that become influential when

stakeholders mobilize to bring about change. In education, as the professional authority

of school boards and superintendents diminishes, community stakeholders are

increasingly prominent. They serve as critical producers and providers of cultural

characterizations of public education and its beneficiaries. As such, the engagement of

community stakeholders with public sector institutions, organizations, and individuals

can significantly amplify, modify, or blunt education policy.

The dissertation traces the history of community mobilization in San Francisco

from 1971 to 2005, during which the federal district court supervised all aspects of the

school district’s student assignment policy. Cultural characterizations of student

assignment were structured by three distinct logics of action: integration, choice, and

neighborhood. These logics were stable but not fixed. Changes in the institutional

environment coupled with how stakeholders framed, understood, and shaped these logics

led to transformations in student assignment policy that ultimately altered the educational

experience of multiple generations of public school students.

The dissertation is presented in two parts, each with a class action lawsuit against

the school district at its analytical core, and each focused on the politics, both contentious

and collaborative, that guided the community stakeholders who sought to protect, or

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dismantle, the status quo student assignment system. The main story of Part One is the

replacement of a bipolar desegregation framework for student assignment with a

multipolar integration framework. Part Two addresses a second transformation in student

assignment, the replacement of a race conscious integration framework with a race

neutral diversity framework. A central theme addressed in the dissertation is the decline

of school desegregation and the subsequent rise of school choice. San Francisco

experienced demographic shifts similar to many cities throughout the West: the arrival

and subsequent departure of African American families, the arrival of immigrant families

from Mexico and countries throughout Central America and Asia, and the departure of

white families. As such, San Francisco provides an opportunity to illuminate the post-

Brown racial dynamics of community mobilization in the urban district of the West.

Data are drawn primarily from archival documents from the federal district court,

the school district, and community organizations; mainstream and community newspaper

articles, letters to the editor, and editorials; and, retrospective interviews with key

stakeholders.

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Acknowledgements

This dissertation would not have been possible without the support of mentors,

colleagues, friends, and family. I am indebted to the members of my reading committee,

Leah Gordon, Milbrey McLaughlin, Michael Kirst, and Francisco Ramirez, for their

careful feedback, sage advice, and steady encouragement. Anthony Antonio, a friend

from way back, provided helpful comments during the oral exam that sharpened my ideas

for this project’s next phase. I owe a special debt to Deb Meyerson. She oversaw nearly

every milestone I had at Stanford and advised the great majority of the dissertation, from

idea to proposal, to data collection, to analysis. I thank Ann Porteus, George Lipsitz,

Megan Tompkins-Stange, Mytoan Nguyen, Monica McDermott, Doug McAdam, and

Luis Fraga, for providing crucial feedback during the early stages of the project.

Foremost among the many librarians and archivists to whom I owe special thanks

are Susan Snyder of the Bancroft Library at U.C. Berkeley, Tami Suzuki of the San

Francisco History Center, Charles Miller of the National Archives and Records

Administration, and Wei Chi Poon of the Ethnic Studies Library at U.C. Berkeley. I

thank the special collections librarians at Stanford, Berkeley, and Santa Barbara, and the

reference librarians at the San Francisco Public Library, the San Francisco Law Library,

and the Robert Crown Law Library. I also thank the folks at the Federal Records Center

in San Bruno where I spent many, many long days.

Brenda Huang, a friend and former colleague, provided valuable insight into the

local Chinese media landscape and facilitated an introduction to Tim Lau, chief executive

at Sing Tao Daily. Hai Yang, Claire Kwan, and Qinglian Lu made an important

contribution to the study by identifying and translating relevant articles from Sing Tao

Daily and Chinese Times. This was an immense task that required reviewing, by hand,

hundreds of newspapers. Much of this work occurred at Sing Tao Daily’s newspaper

morgue, which Mr. Lau generously allowed us to access. I thank my informants for

sharing their wisdom and perspective. Several were kind enough to lend personal papers,

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organizational records, newspaper clippings and other artifacts that greatly contributed to

my understanding. My most sincere thanks goes to Doug Chan, David Levine, Miranda

Massie, Libby Denebeim, Henry Louie and Denise Louie.

Midway through the project, I received very helpful feedback and support from

the members of the BGSA and SUSE dissertation writing groups. For this, I thank Erica

Williams, Courtney Bonam, Donna Winston, Maria Hyler, Carla Roach, and especially

Hayin Kim. Other friends lent support in various ways, large and small, all along the

way, including Carrie Oelberger, Lambrina Mileva, Nii Addy, Chris Gonzalez Clarke,

Marcela Muñiz, Stelios Orphanos, Jeffrey Steedle, Brian Lukoff, Grace Atukpawu, Peter

Ross, and David Diehl.

Institutional support was crucial to the successful completion of the dissertation.

Some early musings benefited from the input of colleagues and mentors at the Center on

Philanthropy and Civil Society. As the study progressed, critical feedback from graduate

and faculty fellows at the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity served to

sharpen my analysis. A graduate fellowship from CCSRE and awards from the School of

Education Dissertation Support Grant and the Vice Provost for Graduate Education

Diversity Dissertation Research Opportunity Fund supported the research and writing.

Most of all, I’m grateful for Amy Yuen and the love we’ve shared through the years.

Together, we thank our parents, siblings, and extended family for their support and

encouragement.

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In memory of Jeffrey Trinidad (1974-2002) and B. J. Alisago (1975- 2005).

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Table of Contents Abstract iv Acknowledgements vi Tables x Illustrations xi Abbreviations xii

Introduction 1 Literature 19 Conceptual Framework 30 Context, Data, and Methods 41 Notes 59

PART ONE. Desegregating San Francisco Schools, 1971-1983 70

SFNAACP v. SFUSD 77 Crosstown Busing 101 Freedom of Choice 120 “On a long road. . .” 127 Notes 134

PART TWO. School Diversity and Resegregation by Consent, 1983-2005 151

Ho v. SFUSD 158 School Lottery 203 Neighborhood Schools 223 “The greatest disappointment.” 244 Notes 253

Conclusion 284 Notes 301

Methodological Addendum 302 Appendix 306 Bibliography 337

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Tables

Table 1. San Francisco postwar demographic changes 43 Table 2. SFUSD student population by subgroup (percent), 1965-1978 86 Table 3. Elementary school level racial balance with ±15 percent standard, 1971 92 Table 4. Share of districtwide subgroup population (percent), c1971 93 Table 5. Racial percentages by Horseshoe Zone, c1971 93 Table 6. School level racial balance with ±15 percent standard, 1977 94 Table 7. Racial balance in SFUSD school assignment plans 96 Table 8. SFSUD School budget before and after Prop. 13 (in millions) 98 Table 9. What San Francisco thinks about busing 102 Table 10. Transportation for K-5 Students, Pre- and Post-Educational Redesign 106 Table 11. Enrollment in San Francisco Public Schools 109 Table 12. Black student enrollment in Bayview-Hunters Point schools (percent) 113 Table 13. SFUSD state reimbursement for desegregation, 1982-1990 133 Table 14. SFUSD student population by subgroup (percent), 1977-1992 167 Table 15. Schools impacted by enrollment caps, March 1993 168 Table 16. Lowell High School Student Enrollment, 1986 169 Table 17. Percent of SFUSD schools with at least one racial or ethnic group >45% 205

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Illustrations

Figures

Figure 1. SFUSD, Student Enrollment, 1948-2009 45 Figure 2. SFUSD, Student Enrollment by Four Largest Subgroups, 1965-2009 46 Figure 3. State and local revenue share for SFUSD (percent). 98 Figure 4. Racial Imbalance in Elementary Schools, 1973-1977 121 Figure 5. Racial Identifiability in SFSUD schools, 1965-1990 154 Figure 6. Racial Identifiability in SFSUD schools, 1965-2006 208

Maps

Map 1. San Francisco Neighborhoods xiii Map 2. SFUSD Elementary Schools (partial list) 307 Map 3. SFUSD Middle Schools (partial list) 308 Map 4. SFUSD High Schools (partial list) 309 Map 5. African American population of San Francisco, 1970 310 Map 6. African American population of San Francisco, 2000 310 Map 7. Chinese population of San Francisco, 1970 311 Map 8. Chinese population of San Francisco, 2000 311 Map 9. Latino population of San Francisco, 1970 312 Map 10. Latino population of San Francisco, 2000 312 Map 11. White population of San Francisco, 1970 313 Map 12. White population of San Francisco, 2000 313 Map 13. San Francisco Unified School District Horseshoe Plan 314

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Abbreviations

AALF Asian American Legal Foundation BAMN Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary CAA Chinese for Affirmative Action CADC Chinese American Democratic Club CAC Citizens Advisory Committee CCNS Citizens Committee for Neighborhood Schools CORE Congress of Racial Equality CPA Chinese Progressive Association CSIP Comprehensive School Improvement Program E/Q Educational Equality/Quality EPC Educational Placement Center, SFUSD INA Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 LULAC League of United Latin American Citizens MALDEF Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund META Multicultural Education, Training, and Advocacy NAACP National Association for the Advancement of Colored People OER Optional Enrollment Request PFNSA Parents for Neighborhood Schools Association PNSAP Proposed New Student Assignment Plan PPS-SF Parents for Public Schools, San Francisco Chapter PTA Parent Teacher Association SFNAACP NAACP, San Francisco chapter SFUSD San Francisco Unified School District SBE State Board of Education, California SOS Study Our Schools SRI Stanford Research Institute STAR Students and Teachers Achieving Results TAP Temporary Attendance Permit UESF United Educators of San Francisco

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Map 1. San Francisco Neighborhoods

Data Source: City and County of San Francisco Planning Department. (ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

1 Golden Gate Park 20 Mission 2 Outer Sunset 21 Bayview-Hunters Point 3 Seacliff 22 Potrero Hill 4 Presidio 23 Bernal Heights 5 Outer Richmond 24 Excelsior 6 Inner Sunset 25 Visitacion Valley 7 Haight Ashbury 26 Crocker Amazon 8 Presidio Heights 27 Oceanview 9 Inner Richmond 28 Lakeshore

10 North Beach 29 Parkside 11 Russian Hill 30 Glen Park 12 Nob Hill 31 Diamond Heights 13 Chinatown 32 Twin Peaks 14 Downtown 33 Castro/Upper Market 15 Financial District 34 Noe Valley 16 Marina 35 Outer Mission 17 Western Addition 36 West of Twin Peaks 18 Pacific Heights 37 Treasure Island 19 South of Market

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Introduction

“Perhaps the most important function”

Brown v. Board of Education resulted in the largest and most contentious public

education reform effort in postwar United States.1 The story here is well known. Brown

was the product of a decades-long, carefully crafted legal strategy by the NAACP.2

Respondent school districts operated statutory dual systems but had ostensibly equalized

or were in the process of equalizing various elements of education for black and white

students. Petitioners argued that despite these efforts, the “separate but equal” doctrine

established nearly six decades earlier violated the Fourteenth Amendment by depriving

black students equal educational opportunities.3 Justices were thus required to consider

the sole question of racial segregation, rather than questions of unequal benefits or

resources, as it had in prior cases.4 “[E]ducation is perhaps the most important function of

state and local governments,” observed the court. As an institution necessary to

democracy, educational opportunity “is a right which must be made available to all on

equal terms.”5 While the court declared the dual school systems prevalent in Mississippi,

Arkansas, and other Southern states unconstitutional, the creation of unitary systems in

their place was a slow, and at times violent, process. Massive resistance to desegregation

meant decades of political and legal struggle before progress of real significance was

made. But by the 1980s, Southern school districts had been transformed into some of the

most integrated systems in the country.6

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Desegregation extended beyond the South, of course. But institutionalized racial

discrimination was not necessarily the principal explanation for racial imbalance in

schools outside of the South. Many unitary districts across the North and West were

segregated due to attendance boundaries, neighborhood preferences, housing

discrimination, and other factors, both deliberate and unintended. For the unitary district

that was de facto segregated, proving a constitutional violation was a difficult proposition

that required accounting for these various local contextual factors. (As I describe in the

narrative, what, specifically, constituted de facto segregation was contested and

ultimately evolved over time.) Consequently, the NAACP employed a largely district-by-

district political and legal strategy outside of the South. Occasionally, districts voluntarily

adopted desegregation programs following political pressure from local chapters of the

NAACP and other civil rights organizations. But often, plans were mandated and

overseen by the federal district court following legal action.

As a result of Brown, desegregation programs were implemented in hundreds of

school districts throughout the country.7 However, widespread desegregation was

relatively short-lived, and districts have gradually resegregated in recent years.8 Judicial

conservatism is among the leading explanations of the resegregation trend. Throughout

the last four decades, courts have issued a string of successively restrictive rulings, most

recently a prohibition on the use of racial classifications in student assignment when part

of a voluntary effort by a district to integrate its schools.9 On balance, courts have held

that segregated schools that are not the result of overt discrimination but rather the result

of demographic or housing patterns are acceptable. So while the proscription on dual

systems remains, permissible remedies for de facto segregation are limited. Other broad

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factors that lead to resegregation include federal level administrative retrenchment,

decreased enthusiasm for integration by civil rights groups, and a lack of political will by

policymakers.10 On a local level, resegregation may be exacerbated by an array of factors

including an absence of support from community leaders, a resistant school board and

superintendent, an unwelcoming political climate, and a poorly designed desegregation

plan.

Despite extensive scholarship on the politics of school desegregation, there are areas

where contributions can be made. Literature centers on the story of black legal action and

white resistance. We know less about the response to desegregation from other racial and

ethnic communities. This is an understandable bias since the primary dynamic of

desegregation has always been black-white, particularly early on in its history. However,

the increasing diversity of urban districts from the 1970s to the present day necessitates

an understanding of the multiracial and multiethnic politics of desegregation.

In addition, the weight of the literature resides in the 1970s and early 1980s, when

desegregation efforts were embedded in the larger Civil Rights movement, when the

federal courts and the Administration were significantly engaged in the desegregation

process, and when desegregation was seen as a viable means to improve the academic

achievement of African American students. Without longer periods of examination, we

are left with an incomplete understanding of the political thrusts and parries between

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proponents and opponents that resulted in the rise and, in recent decades, decline of

desegregation.

At its core, desegregation impinges on student assignment policy. The

introduction of a desegregation plan to a school district challenges accepted principles

and practices regarding the assignment of students to schools. Desegregation requires

communities to ask: How are we to determine which students attend which schools?

What is the role of the school district in making this determination? What role do parents

have in the process? and What are the roles of the legal system and other societal

institutions? By broadening the analytical focus in this way, observers can understand the

trajectory of desegregation in relation to competing notions of student assignment shared

across stakeholders, thus gaining insight into the struggle over principles, practices, and

policies in urban education reform, and the role of culture in the education policy process.

The goal of the dissertation is to shed light on the political nature and effect of

cultural characterizations on the development of student assignment policy. To

accomplish this, I analyze the court-supervised era of student assignment in San

Francisco, from 1971 to 2005. The dissertation explains how cultural characterizations

held, manipulated, and deployed by mobilized community stakeholders led to major

transformations in student assignment policy—transformations that altered the

educational experience of multiple generations of public school students. As the first

large district outside of the South to face desegregation demands under threat of

litigation, San Francisco is an important chapter in the history of American school

discrimination.11 Apart from its historical significance, San Francisco serves as a stand-in

for the post-Brown urban school district of the West. San Francisco witnessed the same

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racial demographic shifts that transformed cities throughout California and elsewhere: the

in-migration of African American families from the South, the arrival of new Latino and

Asian immigrant families, and the exodus of white families to the suburbs. As such, San

Francisco provides an opportunity to illuminate the racial politics of student assignment

and the complicated process through which community stakeholders seek to challenge or

protect institutional arrangements in public education.

In the remaining paragraphs of this section, I briefly review the history of school

discrimination in San Francisco up through 1971 as a means of providing legal, political,

and social context. (Several maps are included to aid readers unfamiliar with the spatial

characteristics of San Francisco. Map 1 depicts the city’s neighborhoods. In Maps 2, 3,

and 4, neighborhoods are overlaid with schools identified in the dissertation, past and

present. Maps 5 to 12 illustrate residential patterns by racial and ethnic population in

1970 and 2000.)

A century of legal school segregation

In our busy streets throng the jostling multitudes of every clime, Israelite, Christian and Pagan; at every step we meet the representatives of every nation and of every shade of civilization, custom, and taste.— John Pelton, Superintendent of Public Schools, San Francisco, November 1867.12

Ward v. Flood

California’s public education system formally began with the enactment of an 1851 law

to apportion state funds for the establishment of public schools.13 Within a year, a rapidly

growing San Francisco had opened six grammar schools throughout the city. Its seventh

school was notable: On May 22, 1854, a full century (nearly to the day) before the

Supreme Court would issue its ruling in Brown, the Reverend John Jamison Moore, a

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former slave, was called upon to lead California’s first public school for black children.

The “Colored School,” as it was referred to, was established in the basement of St.

Cyprian African Methodist Episcopal Church in what is now Chinatown and provided

instruction to several dozen students.14 Moore was a prominent and respected leader in

San Francisco’s black community. “He is, perhaps, the best scholar of color in the State,”

wrote one such resident. “His sermons are looked upon as learned effusions. He is a very

instructive preacher, and is doing much good.”15 A few years later, after Chinese families

petitioned the school board, the “Chinese School” was established in a Presbyterian

chapel just a few blocks away. The following year it was reconstituted into an evening

school to accommodate the growing number of Chinese male adults seeking instruction

who worked during the day.16

By 1865, California had legislated that children of “African or Mongolian

descent, and Indian children not living under the care of white persons” were to attend

separate schools under most circumstances. Only upon approval by the school board and

a majority of white parents could non-white students be admitted into a white school. The

law coincided with the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment and the passage of the

Civil Rights Act of 1866. In 1870, the California Legislature struck the reference to

“Mongolians” but retained provisions specifying that only white students qualified for

general admission into public schools. The move led San Francisco to shutter its Chinese

school in 1871.17

Around this time, African Americans throughout the state mobilized to challenge

school segregation. A legal strategy was devised and in 1872 a complaint was made to

the California Supreme Court on behalf of Mary Frances Ward, a student who had been

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turned away from Broadway Primary School in San Francisco because she was black.

Ward argued that school segregation amounted to a violation of equal protection and

other constitutional guarantees. “‘Common schools’… means public, common to all, in a

political sense,” stated Ward. With the recent ratification of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth

Amendments, “no child who is a citizen of California can be excluded by reason of color

or race from any common or public school of the State.” The court agreed that the state

could not deny public education to a child on the basis of race. However, it noted that

while Ward had been denied the right to attend a white school, she was free to enroll in

the “Colored School.”18

The ruling notwithstanding, on August 3, 1875, the San Francisco Board of

Education voted to create a unitary school system after deciding to allow “colored”

students to attend any public school in the district. “Thus, with one fell swoop, the caste

barrier which has excluded colored children from attending the public schools among

white children was broken down with a sudden avalanche… Both white and colored

citizens should rejoice that this last relic of slavery has at last disappeared,” proclaimed

The Pacific Appeal. By 1880, legislators in Sacramento followed suit, amending the

school law by requiring districts to open all schools to all children. While African

Americans in the state would never again be victims of school segregation by law, legal

discrimination of other communities continued. It would take several more decades,

replete with incremental advances and retreats, before all of California’s school

segregation policies would be permanently overturned.19

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Tape v. Hurley

San Francisco had been without a public school for Chinese children since 1871. And

despite state and local proclamations suggesting otherwise, Chinese students had little

practical access to general admission schools. Instead, many Chinese families enrolled

their children in missionary and community-run schools.20 In 1884, Principal Jennie

Hurley barred Mamie Tape, a Chinese American child, from enrolling in Spring Valley

Elementary School. Tape brought suit. The Municipal Court determined, and the

California Supreme Court subsequently affirmed, that children of Chinese descent had a

right to public education.21 But the courts also reiterated its earlier position in Ward on

the constitutionality of the legal segregation of schools. As the case proceeded, with the

tremendous growth of the Chinese community and anti-Chinese racism running rampant,

California school law was amended (with near unanimous support) to permit districts to

mandate separate schools for students of Chinese descent. In short order, San Francisco

opened a new “Chinese School” that Tape and all other Chinese students seeking a public

school education would be required to attend.22

San Francisco did not have the requisite funds to establish separate schools for its

much smaller Japanese and Korean communities, so these students were integrated into

their neighborhood schools. But following the 1906 earthquake and an ensuing drop in

enrollment in the “Chinese School,” the school board directed all Chinese, Japanese, and

Korean students to attend a newly established “Oriental Public School.”23 This act of

exclusion strained relationships between the national governments of Japan and the

United States. Under pressure from President Theodore Roosevelt, San Francisco finally

agreed to rescind the policy in 1907. In Sacramento, after several failed attempts, the

state legislature voted in 1921 to expand its list of subgroups for which separate schools

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could legally be established. Districts were now permitted to establish separate schools

for students of Japanese, Chinese, and “Mongolian” ancestry.24 By 1929 all exclusionary

language had once more been removed from state code. But in 1943, the legislature

reinstated provisions in the Education Code permitting the segregation of “Indian” (under

certain conditions), Chinese, Japanese, and “Mongolian” students.25

The history of exclusion in San Francisco was quickly forgotten. In 1926,

representatives from the North Beach Improvement Association and the Central Council

of Civic Clubs presented to the school board a petition signed by 351 parents of

Francisco Junior High School. The parents opposed the enrollment of Chinese students at

the school. The delegation was informed by the school board that if the district “had

established a Chinese School it was not with the thought in mind that the school be a

segregated school, but rather with the idea of enabling the children of that section to

attend a near-by school.”26

Mendez v. Westminster

By the mid-1940s, a reported one-fifth of non-metropolitan schools across California

segregated students of Mexican descent.27 Intent on eliminating the practice, five Orange

County fathers, with support from other parents, the League of United Latin American

Citizens (LULAC), and the locally-based Latin American Organization, sued four county

elementary school districts in 1946.28 The class action suit was filed on behalf of 5,000

students of “Mexican or Latin descent” on the basis that the districts had violated the

Fourteenth Amendment guarantee of equal protection. The policy in place at three of the

districts, Westminster, Garden Grove, and El Modeno, was to assign non-English

speaking elementary students to separate schools, apart from the English speaking

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students.29 But as implemented, English speaking Mexican students were grouped

together with English learners. The fourth district, Santa Ana, was without a formal

policy of segregation but had informal practices in place that made it analogous to the

other three. The districts argued that resources were equal across schools and that the

segregation was merely a byproduct of their pedagogical decisions toward English

learners.

Plaintiffs prevailed. Foretelling the monumental events to occur at the Supreme

Court seven years later, District Court Judge Paul McCormick took issue with Plessy’s

separate but equal doctrine: “A paramount requisite in the American system of public

education is social equality. It must be open to all children by unified school association

regardless of lineage.”30 McCormick’s ruling was affirmed by the Ninth Circuit the

following year, albeit on narrower legal grounds.31 The California Education Code only

allowed for the segregation of certain Asian and Indian subgroups.32 Provisions allowing

for the segregation of Latino subgroups did not exist. Thus, the Appeals Court

determined that the segregation practiced in Orange County was in violation of state law.

Although the Appeals Court didn’t consider the legality of segregating Asian and Indian

students, months after the ruling, Governor Earl Warren repealed the offending sections,

the last remnants of de jure school segregation in California. The case was truly a

precursor to Brown. In addition to the similarity in content, the case connected perhaps

the two most important individuals to the dismantlement of legal school segregation in

America. Warren would later be appointed Chief Justice of the United States Supreme

Court and would deliver the landmark Brown opinions. And during the appeal, utilizing

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arguments that would remain largely intact for Brown, NAACP counsel Thurgood

Marshall served as amicus curiae.

“We must study our school system”

While laws permitting segregation had been relegated to history, segregation itself

remained. “There is discrimination in the drawing of school district lines for new

schools,” editorialized the Sun-Reporter, a newspaper serving San Francisco’s African

American community. This “leads to the creation of predominantly Negro schools on one

hand, and predominantly white schools on the other, resulting in the development of a ‘de

facto’ segregated school system.” By 1959, community leaders had organized families to

formally tackle the issue. Discussions with school administrators and board members

took place, but without resolution. The extent of the problem was difficult to gauge

accurately as there was no official racial census of the schools. “We do not have the facts

to support or disprove these rather serious charges against our system of education,”

observed the Sun-Reporter. “Invariably these charges against the San Francisco Public

Schools have been denied and the school officials have demanded evidence and proof of

the charges made.”33

A campaign, led by Sun-Reporter publisher Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett, was

launched ahead of the 1959 school year. It began with a “Study our Schools” (SOS)

conference at the Booker T. Washington Community Center that drew over a hundred

participants from “churches, political organizations, civic clubs, labor leaders, PTA

members, the NAACP, and the Urban League.” School segregation is a “dangerous

disease” that must be confronted, community members were warned. The plan crafted by

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the SOS committee was to hire an independent authority to conduct a study of the

schools, and commit the mayoral candidates to appoint a school board member who

represented the African American community. But the district was adamant that school

discrimination was not a problem and in 1960, Superintendent Harold Spears testified

before the United States Civil Rights Commission that in San Francisco, student

assignment policies were completely colorblind.34

The San Francisco branch of the NAACP (SFNAACP) was not alone in its

formulation of a plan to address de facto segregation. A number of branches throughout

the North and West were also developing and executing homegrown political action

campaigns and litigation strategies. The national office supported this work, creating a

community action program to provide technical assistance to local branches. “You must

and should attack school segregation in your communities,” wrote Robert Carter, general

counsel of the NAACP. But Carter cautioned that campaigns needed to be carefully

planned: “The law is not at all settled, and a bad precedent resulting from a decision

against you will hurt not only your efforts but countless other districts with similar

problems.”35

In San Francisco, efforts to push the district forward plodded along before

intensifying in 1962. Proponents of desegregation from the Congress of Racial Equality

(CORE) and the Bay Area Human Relations Clearinghouse came before the board of

education in January to persuade the school board to “officially recognize the existence

of de facto school segregation in San Francisco… [and] to declare that such a pattern in

the schools is educationally undesirable.”36 In April, the SFNAACP formally announced

a campaign demanding that San Francisco voluntarily desegregate its schools.37 Robert

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Carter traveled to San Francisco to hold a press conference in which he broached the idea

of busing as a desegregation mechanism.38 The district resisted. “I have no educationally

sound program to suggest to eliminate the schools in which the children are

predominantly of one race,” stated Spears. “If we were preparing to ship these children to

various schools, in predetermined racial allotments, then such brands would serve the

same purpose they have been put to in handling livestock.”39

The district was preparing for the opening of the new Central Junior High School

serving the Haight Ashbury and Western Addition neighborhoods.40 Its proposed

catchment area would create a predominantly African American student population. The

SFNAACP was joined by CORE, the Council for Civic Unity, the San Francisco Labor

Council, and neighborhood parents in opposing a segregated Central. Terry Francois,

chair of the SFNAACP, demanded that Central’s lines be redrawn. “We haven’t decided

what we will do,” he told the New York Times. “We’ve talked about boycotting the

school and picketing. Of course, we also probably will go to court.”41 The San Francisco

Chronicle editorialized:

Well, the time has come for us to forget Dixieland, with its segregated scrapple

and fatback, and to worry about our own backyard…The San Francisco Board of

Education should put a reasonable proportion of whites and Negroes in every

public school, even if this means carrying Negro or white children across

neighborhood lines.42

The district estimated that Central would have a black enrollment of at least 50 percent.

Parents from Grattan Elementary and other proposed feeder schools feared that a racially

imbalanced Central would prompt white families to leave what was considered to be an

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integrated neighborhood. “People just don’t want the city to open another racially

segregated school,” declared Mara McMurtry, president of the Grattan parent’s group.

Despite intense lobbying efforts over the summer, at a raucous meeting on August 7,

1962, the school board refused to budge from their support of the original boundaries. In

response, parents from Grattan filed suit contending that the anticipated racial

demographics of Central would constitute a violation of equal protection. This was

countered by the formation of Citizens Committee for Neighborhood Schools (CCNS),

based in the predominantly white Sunset District. “The committee feels that race has

never been a consideration to affect the sound educational policies by the Superintendent

and the Board of Education, and that the race issue should not now be injected into

school administration,” argued CCNS in a letter to the Superintendent. “For this reason

we strongly urge you and the Board of Education to refuse to change the district lines for

Central Junior High School for the purpose of changing the racial composition of that

school.” With the controversy escalating, the school board, upon the recommendation of

Spears, decided to abandon Central altogether during an August meeting described as its

most heavily attended to date. Central was a “symbol of racial strife,” declared Judge

Alfonso Zirpoli, who commended the board’s action before dismissing the lawsuit.43

But school segregation remained an issue. In early October 1962, the SFNAACP

filed another lawsuit, this time challenging racial imbalance throughout the entire school

system.44 Several weeks later, the California State Board of Education (SBE) issued a call

for the prevention and elimination of school segregation.45 The following spring, a San

Francisco Board of Education committee formed to “study ethnic factors” determined

that school attendance zones were delineated “without intent to manipulate school

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population in such a way as to produce racial homogeneity.”46 Furthermore, the

committee determined that it was in accordance with California’s requirement that

“boundaries be reasonably drawn on the basis of proximity and equity” for students.47

However, in an effort to alleviate existing racial imbalance, the committee recommended

that “wherever practicable and reasonable and consistent with the neighborhood school

plan,” race be used as a factor in establishing or redrawing attendance boundaries.

Parenthetically, the committee took exception with how the issue had been framed by

mobilized community activists:

The term ‘segregation’ whether de jure or de facto is a misnomer as applied to

San Francisco schools. Segregation is an overt act that has not occurred in San

Francisco. It is a disservice to the City and its schools to fail to distinguish

between local racial concentration and the kind of school conditions elsewhere

that might merit the term ‘segregation’48

As with the prior SFNAACP lawsuit, the case was eventually dismissed in December

1964.49 Earlier that year, the district finally succumbed to pressure and agreed to conduct

a racial census of its schools.50 Yet, the school board would refuse to release the results

until August 1965, just over six years after demands for a count first surfaced.51 When the

results were finally made public, the data revealed a pattern of widespread racial

imbalance, particularly in the lower grades. Districtwide, elementary schools were

approximately 57 percent white, 28 percent black, and 15 percent Asian.52 The census

revealed that 17 of the district’s 95 elementary schools had student enrollments greater

than 90 percent white. Twenty-four schools were at least 57 percent black, nine were

more than 90 percent black. Fourteen schools had Asian enrollments greater than 30

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percent.53 Proponents of desegregation now had the hard facts to support what was

widely known to be true. The district came under renewed pressure to devise a workable

plan to create racially balanced schools. “Whatever method is employed, the

discrepancies shown in the newly released school census must be redressed so that the

city’s children of all races and cultural surroundings may have equal school facilities and

equal school environments,” editorialized the San Francisco Chronicle. “Otherwise,

serious trouble lies ahead.”54

Equality/Quality

School segregation continued to be a deeply polarizing issue. By the mid-1960s, the

number of community organizations mobilized to fight for or against school

desegregation had grown to thirty.55 A subtle shift began to occur in local government.

The San Francisco Human Rights Commission stepped in to urge the school district to

adopt a program of integration.56 The district hired the Stanford Research Institute (SRI)

to create a set of possible desegregation plans.57 As terms expired on the school board,

the mayor appointed new commissioners supportive of racial balance.58 And a retiring

Spears was replaced in 1967 by Robert Jenkins, the former leader of Pasadena City

School District, who had guided that system’s desegregation efforts.

The new superintendent’s first task was to improve racial balance across schools.

He promptly rejected all of the plans that had been developed by SRI for failing to

consider instruction.59 In their place, he called for desegregation paired with an increase

in resources and special programs—a dual strategy he referred to as Educational

Equality/Quality (E/Q). A task force of teachers and administrators was formed to push

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E/Q forward. To provide constituents a role in the planning process, Jenkins appointed

representatives from labor, community organizations, and business to a Citizens Advisory

Committee (CAC).60 Together, the CAC and the Superintendent’s task force crafted a

plan for two elementary level “complexes.” Each complex merged several elementary

school catchment areas into a single large zone. Students would be assigned so that

individual schools would have a demographic profile that approximated the demographic

profile of the complex as a whole. Schools would be reorganized, curriculum resource

centers would be established, and staff would receive specialized training.61 The

Superintendent originally proposed a complex for the predominantly black southeast

corner of the city. But in the end, complexes were created in the predominantly white

Sunset (“Park South”) and Richmond Districts. As drawn up, Park South comprised of

eight elementary schools serving just over 3,500 students. Richmond comprised 12

elementary schools serving 5,300 students. If implemented, the complexes would

collectively cover one fifth of the city’s elementary population.62 “This is much more

than a plan for desegregating schools,” announced board chair Dr. Laurel Glass. “It is an

exciting plan for improving the quality of education in the district.”63

Despite its limited scope, opposition to the complex plan was considerable. Board

meetings were contentious, occasionally erupting in violence amid concerns over “forced

busing” (even though busing was to be contained to the boundaries of the complex),

questions about the ‘quality’ aspects of E/Q, and issues of funding.64 On June 3, 1969, the

board of education conditionally accepted the plan with a requirement that additional

revisions be submitted by December.65 The plan would go on to be approved by the

school board in January 1970, with the Richmond complex executed that September (and

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Park South set to take effect in the near future). But the incremental and slow-moving

process had angered desegregation proponents. On June 24, 1970 the SFNAACP filed a

lawsuit on behalf of African American elementary school children, charging the district

with “maintaining and operating a dual school system by means of policies and practices

of racial discrimination and segregation” in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.66

San Franciscans are “sick, tired, and ashamed of the segregated schools in the city,”

proclaimed SFNAACP president Charles Belle.67 The court would rule in favor of the

SFNAACP and order citywide elementary school desegregation to commence by the start

of the 1971-1972 school year.

So began a 34-year period of court supervision, a period beset by competing and

evolving ideas of the purpose of student assignment that encompassed successive

episodes of community mobilization, two additional class action lawsuits (plus a third

suit that was subsequently dropped), and the introduction of numerous policy

alternatives. In the following sections, prior to two analytical chapters that lie at the heart

of the dissertation, I provide some necessary background. I first offer a critical review of

the relevant literature on community mobilization and the policy process. I then discuss

the theories that conceptually frame the investigation. Finally, I present the methodology

for the study and describe how the data were collected and analyzed. Following the

analytical chapters, I conclude by discussing the contributions the study makes to the

politics of education scholarship, among others.

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Literature

The formal authority of government is limited, and substantial resources are in private hands. Especially at the local level, the power of public officials may be dwarfed by processes and activities outside government control.—Clarence N. Stone68 One of the more enduring insights offered by political observers old and new is that civil

society influences local politics. Civil society is that arena of social interaction apart from

market and state.69 It includes private sector nonprofit and voluntary organizations that

bring individuals together to pursue shared goals. A core function for many of these

organizations is interest representation. Across the United States, business councils,

religious associations, statewide advocacy organizations, and neighborhood groups,

among others, vie to have the interests of their constituents (as well as their

organizational interests) met by public policymakers. In the local politics of urban

education, community organizations—nonprofit and voluntary organizations that serve a

defined constituency and whose core operations and activities occur at the municipal

level or below—are prominent actors. Community organizations facilitate the

mobilization of constituents and their interests in a variety of ways. While some

community organizations have education as a primary mission, others are relatively

detached from schools and districts, stepping into the fray only during particularly

contentious periods of reform. And while some are created solely for the purpose of

representing the interests of their constituency to policymakers, many community

organizations pursue other activities as a matter of course and only get involved in

advocacy from time to time, as the need arises.

In recent years, scholars have attended to the development of theory on the

character and effect of community mobilization. (By ‘community mobilization’ I refer to

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the interaction among public and private sector organizations and individuals in pursuit of

shared goals.) To ground the study, I review relevant scholarship in the following

subsections. First, I address how the local political process is influenced through

collaboration among public and private sector organizations and individuals.

Collaboration often comes about when community organizations are invited to participate

in public policymaking typically reserved for government actors. Second, I address how

the local political process is influenced through contention among public and private

sector organizations and individuals. Contention can take a range of forms, from the

lobbying associated with advocacy groups to the transgressive action of social movement

organizations.

Community Mobilization, Race, and Collaborative Politics

Work explaining the emergence and effect of collaborative interaction between local

public sector and private sector actors has developed from different disciplinary

perspectives, resulting in distinct yet overlapping concepts. In education, public-private

collaboration is best exemplified by studies of civic capacity and its impact on urban

school reform. Civic capacity refers to the extent to which government and non-

government actors create and maintain broad-based, durable alliances that facilitate the

identification and pursuit of common goals.70 The concept owes its roots to regime

theory, a paradigm in urban politics addressing the inclusion of private sector interests in

governing arrangements.71 Regime theorists argue that public-private coalitions emerge

as a consequence of the fragmentation of systemic power in politics.72 Particularly in

matters related to economic development, decision making can often occur through

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informal urban regimes composed of public and private actors, rather than through the

formal machinery of the city. While local government actors possess legitimacy and

policy making authority, local business leaders control the capital necessary for job

creation, tax revenues, and the funding of political campaigns.73 This division across state

and market encourages the involvement of private business interests in public

governance.

Aside from local business elites, other constituencies with control over resources

and the ability to promote action have the potential to participate in a city’s urban regime.

For example, Clarence Stone’s 1989 study examining four decades of Atlanta politics

argues that local governance was effective because of a governing arrangement that

successfully incorporated both white business interests and the black middle class.

During the Civil Rights era, Atlanta’s biracial coalition peacefully resolved many

contentious issues, including school desegregation, while other cities in the South

endured protracted periods of racial upheaval and violence.74

Cities often use economic development as the vehicle for urban revitalization.

They have a much harder time successfully tackling school reform and other human

capital development efforts. Although many (perhaps most) urban cities have made

attempts to establish coalitions to improve local schools, efforts tend to be brief and

erratic.75 In recent years, Stone and his colleagues have turned their attention to this

puzzle by examining local public-private cooperation across institutional sectors in urban

education.76 The analytical focus of these studies is civic capacity and the political

process stakeholders engage (with varying degrees of success) to provide the resources

and commitment necessary to reform schools. Through multicity comparisons of the local

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political coalitions in which education reform policy is embedded, these scholars seek to

understand the relationship between civic capacity and human capital investments in

schooling, particularly in communities that are racially and ethnically diverse and contain

significant numbers of poor families.77

Education scholars and practitioners have long noted that sustaining effective

urban school reform is a frequent and frustrating challenge.78 The insight civic capacity

studies provide to our understanding of urban school reform (and social reform, by

extension) is that its problems and solutions are, at its core, political in nature. Work on

civic capacity reminds us that while school districts are a part of an interrelated network

of political institutions situated at the local level, they are often not controlled entirely by

local public officials and bureaucrats. Beyond what happens in the classroom, the school,

and the district, the capacity for effective and sustained reform is contingent on

“contextual features and collaborative political arrangements” among a wide array of

committed public and private actors.79

Sustaining commitment across diverse interests is no easy task. Most reform

efforts fail because they amount to little more than the identification of a problem with

schooling and then some cursory gestures toward reform. Civic capacity is a multistep

process. As Stone explains, “We do not simply move from problem recognition to

durable policy response. We do not even move from problem recognition to

dissemination of new ideas to durable policy response. Some institutionalization of effort,

some rearranging of relationships forms an essential step in the reform process.”80

Race and other intergroup tensions complicate civic mobilization and the capacity

for an urban community to sustain effective education reform.81 For example, Henig and

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colleagues examine school reform efforts in Atlanta, Baltimore, Detroit, and

Washington, D.C. Each of these cities experienced a transition in the 1960s and 1970s

from white to black political control following an extended period of white out-migration

and black in-migration. While African Americans controlled city hall and the school

district, major business leaders remained predominantly white. Race relations was a

critical variable in determining the effectiveness of school reform in the four focal cities.

While the cities were able to develop partnerships with the local business community on

education issues, small project-based reform was often the result. Systemic reform was

elusive.82

Most studies addressing the politics of race and urban education tend to be of a

similar vein in that the dynamics observed are largely between black and white

interests.83 Addressing this shortcoming, Susan Clarke and colleagues use a civic

capacity orientation to examine the political dynamics of Los Angeles, Denver, Boston,

and San Francisco during the 1980s and early 1990s, a time when these cities

experienced significant growth of their Asian and Latino populations. Despite this

demographic change, blacks and whites remained in control of the education

policymaking structures—structures that were largely created during earlier periods of

school desegregation. During the 1990s, a “new educational populism” emerged favoring

ideas of market efficiency and privatization at the expense of more traditional notions of

schooling. Despite concerted efforts, the mismatch between school reform agendas, and

the preferences of local communities became a major obstacle for sustained and effective

reform in these cities: “whether the focus was on governance, instruction, or curriculum,

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[institutional reforms] rarely took the ideas and interests of ethnic and racial minorities

fully into account.”84

Civic capacity has a conceptual cousin that similarly addresses public-private

partnerships. Rooted in public administration literature, collaborative governance (also

referred to as empowered participatory governance) describes arrangements where public

agencies bring non-government stakeholders into a collective decision making process.85

Like civic capacity, collaborative governance involves deliberative, sustained, and

consensus-oriented efforts meant to implement public policy or manage public

programs.86 It differs, however, in that collaborative governance arrangements are

structures that are formal in nature while civic capacity includes informal structures. In

both civic capacity and collaborative governance frameworks, the argument is made that

effective and sustained cooperation among private elites and public institutions depends

on such things as shared histories, commitment, common goals, and trust. These factors

evoke social capital, which emphasizes shared trust and norms of reciprocity across

networks of individuals.87 Likewise, there are elements of civic capacity that overlap with

collective efficacy, a concept that grew out of criminology scholarship that refers to the

“social cohesion among neighbors combined with their willingness to intervene on behalf

of the common good.”88 The distinction is that unlike collective efficacy and social

capital, civic capacity refers specifically to public and collective mediation among

diverse interests and refers to an integral relationship with formal institutions of

governance.89

Despite the richness of this literature, there are more insights to be gained. While

civic capacity is a powerful conceptual framework, studies have been ahistorical. Data

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are gathered over a few years, preventing an accounting of how the relationships that

undergird a community’s civic capacity may evolve over longer periods of time. Also,

studies tend to focus on well-established organizations (a problem with urban politics of

education literature, generally). For instance, only the local chapter of the NAACP is

analyzed in Hess’s 1999 study, leaving out potentially dozens of formal and informal

community organizations in any given city that impact the local education policy process.

To summarize thus far, recent decades have witnessed increased interest in

understanding the nature of collaborations among private sector and public sector actors,

and the effect of this interaction on the local public policy process, including public

education reform. Civic capacity, operating at the municipal level, is a means through

which the effectiveness and sustainability of education policy can be understood. Race

and other intergroup tensions are important considerations to account for as they may

impinge on a community’s civic capacity.

Community Mobilization, Race, and Contentious Politics

The previous section reviewed scholarship that seeks to understand the nature and effect

of political collaboration between public and private sector actors. In contrast, this section

reviews scholarship addressing the nature and effect of political contention between

public and private sectors actors. Contentious politics involves interaction among actors

making claims bearing on “someone else’s interests or programs, in which governments

are involved as targets, initiators of claims, or third parties.”90 Following Doug McAdam

and colleagues, I organize this discussion by recognizing two categories of contentious

politics, contained and transgressive.91 Contained politics refers to institutionalized

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activities, for example, public policy advocacy. Although collaborative modes of

governance have received increased attention, modes of contained contention are routine

ways private sector actors are involved in the local political process. While common in

practice, among political sociologists contained forms of contention have received less

attention than transgressive politics. Transgressive politics refers to those

“unconventional” activities commonly associated with social movements. The distinction

between contained and transgressive contention, while theoretically useful, is of minimal

practical use. Community mobilization often involves a range of activities that span both

institutionalized and non-institutionalized forms of contentious politics. For that matter,

community mobilization also engages a range of collaborative and contentious politics

over time and across issues.

Contained Politics

Community organizations can be important adversarial vehicles for harnessing shared

concerns and interests in order to generate political and social change.92 One way this

comes about is through encouraging and facilitating the political participation of

individuals. Community organizations provide their constituents “a door that opens onto

the public square” through which civic engagement skills can be learned.93 Beyond this, a

core activity for many community organizations is to educate and (ultimately) influence

their members, political representatives, and the general public on policy issues.

Community organizations and their constituents sponsor town hall meetings, provide

public testimony at government hearings, write opinion pieces, distribute petitions, and

directly lobby political representatives. This work serves both general areas of concern

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(for example, “children’s health insurance”) as well as specific policy proposals and

legislation (for example, H.R. 2015).

Organizational advocacy and lobbying are common forms of contained

contention. They represent institutionalized, public interest-based claim-making either

promoting or resisting social change.94 In education, community organizations engaged in

advocacy are important vehicles that bring political and material resources to urban

communities, facilitating change.95 For example, McLaughlin and colleagues’ 2009 study

examines politically active youth advocacy organizations. These organizations represent

neither a social movement nor the establishment. Rather, they lie somewhere in the

middle, operating as intermediaries between those with institutional power and those who

are disenfranchised. “To be effective in their mission, advocacy organizations must find

ways to work with both established sectors of the community—schools, juvenile justice

and welfare systems, governmental systems—on the one hand and disadvantaged,

subordinated, disempowered subgroups and interests within the community on the

other.”96 Advocacy organizations fill institutional gaps and are often catalysts for change

and social justice.97

Theorists in recent years have argued convincingly that politically engaged

community organizations improve the quality (and perhaps the equality) of interest

representation.98 By persuading public officials to align policy with the interests of their

constituents, community organizations enhance representation that otherwise would be

limited to voting and other individualized means. The impact extends beyond the

aggregation of individual action. Community organizations involved in advocacy and

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lobbying efforts funnel resources, train leaders and spokespersons, craft messages, and

provide other support, skills, and technical assistance to constituents.

Transgressive Politics

In contrast to contained politics, community organizations also engage in transgressive

politics, exemplified by social movements, as a means of influencing the local political

process. Social movements are sustained campaigns of claim-making, using “repeated

performances that advertise the claim, based on organizations, networks, traditions, and

solidarities that sustain these activities.”99 Social movements often involve a mix of both

institutionalized and non-institutionalized activity. While contained politics focuses on

legitimized advocacy organizations, social movements are transgressive in that they are

“positioned outside the authority structure in question either because of the absence of

recognized standing or access to it, or because they choose to bypass conventionalized

channels of appeal and redress due to distrust of or alienation from the process.”100

Scholarship on social movements has traveled across disciplines over time. Until the

early 1980s, work was predominantly in psychology and examined micro-level processes

that induced individuals to join movements. Arguments centered on how deprivation or

strain together with the development of ideology were preconditions for movement

participation. Today, work resides primarily in political sociology and emphasizes the

mobilization of resources and the structural components of social movements.

Theories of resource mobilization argue that societal strain is more or less

constant. Consequently, the analytical focus is on the importance of resource availability,

organizational structures, and entrepreneurial attempts to meet demands.101 This

perspective situates the formal social movement organization at the center of analysis and

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pays little attention to cultural and social construction.102 While resource mobilization

places focus on the availability of exogenous resources, the emergence of a social

movement may also be viewed as a political process, dependent on expanding political

opportunities or perceived political threats, indigenous organizational strength, shared

perceptions that circumstances are unjust, and a shared sense of efficacy.103 These final

two factors (“cognitive liberation” as described by Doug McAdam) depend on collective

action framing.104 This concept, building on insights from Erving Goffman, helps us

understand the adoption and broadcast of shared definitions. Social movement

organizations are carriers of ideas and meanings. But they are also signifiers. Social

movement organizations have a set of goals, activities, and ideologies that align with the

values and beliefs of their members. For some individuals, a process of frame alignment

is necessary in order to create congruence with a movement organization. Framing shows

that movements are “actively engaged in producing and maintaining meaning for

constituents, antagonists, and bystanders.”105

This collection of social movement theories all contribute to what, in recent

decades, many have generally agreed upon as a common agenda to explain the

emergence and trajectory of social movements: political opportunities and threats,

mobilizing structures, and framing processes.106 Adherents of this agenda emphasize the

dynamic aspects of the model. Political opportunities and threats are subject to

attribution; the appropriation of existing organizations into venues of mobilization is

acknowledged; processes of frame alignment are used not only by movement leaders but

by their opponents, the media, the state, and third parties; collective action is undertaken

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by both challengers and their opponents; and, the mobilization process rather than its

origin is the focal point.107

In summary, community mobilization involves the interaction among public sector and

private sector organizations and individuals. Mobilization influences the local political

process in a variety of ways. It serves as a conduit of resources, provider of leaders, and

amplifier of messages on behalf of city residents. Recent attention has focused on

instances in which government institutions and private organizations form informal

governing coalitions as a means of achieving sustained efforts at reform. But partnerships

such as these, while not impossible, are hard to come by, particularly in human capital

development efforts such as school reform. More common are adversarial approaches in

which community organizations make public interest claims on behalf of their

constituents. Collective struggle includes both contained contention, in which

institutionalized means of claim making are employed by previously established political

actors, and transgressive contention, in which at least some of the parties to the conflict

are new political actors and/or at least some of the claim making employs unconventional

methods.108

Conceptual Framework

The community mobilization literature and its emphasis on collaborative and contentious

interaction among public and private sector actors resonates with recent scholarship on

the role of culture, ideas, and meaning in the process of policy change. This scholarship

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has developed across disciplines (seemingly independently, in some cases) and in a

variety of policy arenas.109 In this section, I discuss two constructs that address

ideological aspects of change central to understanding the trajectory of student

assignment policy in San Francisco.

Logics of Action

Scholarship establishing the new institutionalism in organizational analysis focused on

the constraints institutions place on behavior within an organizational field.110 This

emphasis led to critiques that the theory suffered from over-determinism and a lack of

attention to institutional change.111 However, work has since developed that focuses on

logics and their function in change processes. Logics are those interdependent sets of

ideologies, assumptions, values, and rules of membership that constitute patterns of

organization.112 Put simply, they are “material practices and symbolic constructions” that

provide meaning and guidance for appropriate behavior.113 While logics constrain action

they also enable change.

Each of the major institutional orders in society— corporations, families, markets,

professions, religions, and states—has a fundamental logic.114 For example, Roger

Friedland and Robert Alford describe the institutional logic of capitalism in

contemporary Western society as “accumulation and commodification of human

activity.”115 Political contest over which institutional logic should govern various

activities oftentimes occupies actors within an organizational field.116 This is particularly

the case in organizational fields that are governed by competing or secondary logics

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vying for adherents.117 In these situations, actors mobilize to defend the practices and

symbols of one logic from others.

For example, over the last five decades, multiple competing logics have emerged

in the health care field.118 Prior to 1965, doctors were the sole authority in decisions

around medical services in the largely fee-for service system. The dominant institutional

logic during this early period focused on quality of care at the clinical level, as

determined by the doctor. Beginning in the mid-1960s, the era of professional dominance

that physicians formerly enjoyed gave way. With Johnson’s Great Society programs,

including Medicare and Medicaid, the federal government established itself as a principal

actor within the health care field. The controlling logic during this period centered on the

concept of equitable access. High levels of federal involvement lasted until 1982 when a

new era of managerialism and market-based mechanisms took hold. Health economists,

health care consultants, and other new professionals challenged and, in some cases, took

the place of doctors, nurses, and other “traditional” professionals in the medical field. A

once dominant professional logic was replaced by a managerial or market logic, leading

to a reorganization of the sector that favored efficiency over physician control.119

Scholars have identified multiple competing logics as a condition conducive to change

under other circumstances and in other fields, including executive succession in higher

education publishing, the gradual endorsement of nouvelle cuisine in French gastronomy,

and the transformation in the California thrift industry from an emphasis on mutuality

and rigid enforcement to one of bureaucracy and flexible involvement.120

While this scholarship sets it sights on the institutional aspects of logics, a closely

related collection of studies centers on how logics matter at the organizational field

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level.121 In a well-known study, Paul DiMaggio (1991) examines the role of competing

logics of action in the early 20th Century construction of the modern art museum field in

the United States. The Carnegie Corporation and the American Association of Museums

favored Dana, an alternative professional model for museums, over Gilman, the

traditional model of connoisseurship.122 Similarly, Neil Fligstein (1990) analyzes the

postwar rise of a finance logic of action (and the corresponding decline of manufacturing

and sales/marketing logics of action) in large firms. Several conditions paved the way for

the eventual dominance of finance, including the entrepreneurial activity of executives

who served as carriers for the contending logics.123

Collectively, this work helps explain how the condition of multiple logics of

action lead to change. Within an organizational field, existing and new stakeholders

maintain, carry, and modify competing sets of material practices and symbolic

constructions in a political contest for dominance. How might this relate to the present

study? While the educational systems of many countries are highly structured with strong

ministries of education that possess real authority down to individual schools and even

individual teachers, the United States system of education is decentralized and weakly

structured. Within it, there are several levels and many constituencies that have direct

influence on schools. Elements of educational reform such as student assignment are

likely to involve multiple competing logics of action and bring out stakeholders with

power to directly or indirectly affect change.

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Cultural Characterizations

A complementary line of investigation in political sociology helps illuminate logics of

action. In recent years, scholars have sought to understand how cultural characterizations

structure the development of public policy.124 As it’s used here, cultural characterizations

are portrayals of institutions and beneficiaries that are socially constructed, in the sense

that they are developed from a community’s interpretation of a situation.125 Cultural

characterizations are neither neutral nor static. They are open to debate and subject to

exploitation, particularly when policy alternatives are controversial.126 For instance, the

development of welfare policy in the United States is influenced by constantly evolving

characterizations of the poor as “deserving” (people whose poverty is perceived to be

outside their control, such as the elderly or blind) or “undeserving” (unmotivated people

whose poverty is of their own doing).127 How welfare policy is framed and understood

shapes the adoption of policy alternatives. Welfare programs for the deserving poor (e.g.,

Social Security for the retired elderly) have progressed in ways markedly different from

programs for those deemed undeserving (e.g., General Assistance for unemployed

adults).

Cultural characterizations become influential in policymaking through

stakeholders operating as ideational brokers—organizations and individuals who

formulate, manipulate, and translate culturally constructed ideas across institutional

realms.128 In education, as the professional authority of school boards and

superintendents diminishes,129 community organizations and their leaders are becoming

increasingly prominent ideational brokers. Along with policymakers, they serve as

critical producers and providers of cultural characterizations of public education and its

beneficiaries. As such, while outside the formal governance structure of education,

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community organizations can significantly amplify, modify, and blunt education policy

developed at the local level.

John Campbell’s discussion of the role of ideas and institutional change brings

these concepts together. Campbell argues that scholars must better understand the cultural

mechanisms that allow socially-constructed ideas to affect institutional change.130 He

identifies four types of ideas that vary along two axes. Ideas that affect institutional

change can either be underlying assumptions residing in the background of decision

making or concepts and theories operating in the foreground of decision making. And

ideas can either be outcome-oriented descriptions and theoretical analyses or normative

values, attitudes, and identities. Campbell’s arguments regarding ideas and institutional

change are entirely compatible with literature in political sociology concerned with how

ideas affect public policy.131 Campbell notes that similar to institutional change, “policy-

making is generally about writing or changing rules, regulations, and laws. Sometimes it

is about developing or changing informal procedures and practices that eventually

become so taken-for-granted as to be assumed appropriate and legitimate.”132

Brian Steensland provides a parsimonious synthesis of this literature and an

application of the framework it suggests in his study of the rise and fall of Guaranteed

Annual Income (GAI) policies in the 1960s and 1970s. GAI policy proposals sought to

provide families a basic level income solely on economic need. Steensland argues that the

ultimate failure of these proposals was due to the challenge they represented to a deeply

ingrained conceptualization of welfare dictating that benefits be based on work status

(and thus not on economic need). His work shows how cultural categories of worth

influenced welfare policy development “through their constitutive contribution to cultural

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schemas, their deployment by actors as resources in expert deliberation and public

discourse, and their institutionalization in social programs that reinforced the symbolic

and programmatic boundaries between categories of the poor.”133

Taken together, this scholarship suggests three mechanisms by which cultural

characterizations of public education and its beneficiaries might influence the

development of education policy.

Rhetorical Mechanism

Campbell defines frames as normative concepts and beliefs that exist in the forefront of

debate. (At its core, Campbell’s concept of frames is identical to the concept of collective

action frames in social movement literature.) Frames allow for the legitimation of policy

alternatives when deployed as political rhetoric. This occurs when stakeholders describe

alternatives in such a way that they are interpreted as congruent with constituent interests

and values. For example, in the 1960s school vouchers were framed by proponents as a

free-market solution to improve the quality of public schools in the United States.134

Arguing that the structure of the public school system, by its nature, inhibited the ability

of parents to choose among schools resonated with many families who placed value in a

free market. The framing of vouchers has since evolved. Today, they are framed as a

means of education equity and a way for low-income students of color to have equal

access to schools.

Framing often entails “discursive oppositions” whereby new alternatives are

pitted against the status quo.135 For instance, the introduction of nouvelle cuisine directly

challenged the logic of classical French gastronomy. Culinary activists framed nouvelle

cuisine by contrasting elements of its theory and practice—chef autonomy, small menus

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comprised of fresh ingredients, and short consumption processes—with that of haute

cuisine, which privileged the authority of the restaurateur, large inventories with little

freshness, and long consumption processes.136

An antecedent to Campbell’s concept of frames is found in John Kingdon’s 1984

study of federal agenda setting. Kingdon discusses indicators and their role in structuring

problems. Private and public sector organizations monitor and compile all manner of

indicators: the cost of pre-school, high school graduation rates, math and science

achievement gains, and many others. At any given time, indicators may rise in

prominence and capture stakeholder attention. But the meaning to be derived from an

indicator is not a given. Indicators are interpreted. In a process akin to framing, indicators

are transformed from mere “statements of condition” to “statements of policy

problems.”137

This line of thinking suggests that cultural characterizations of public education

and its beneficiaries influence the development of education policy by activating political

rhetoric deployed by stakeholders. Stakeholders include policy elites hoping to convince

colleagues to support or oppose a particular policy alternative or issue, leaders and

members of community organizations engaged in public policy advocacy, teachers and

their unions, parents, and students. Political rhetoric manifests in a variety of ways: when

deployed as part of public testimony before the school board, through opinion editorials

in the local newspaper, over the course of town hall discussions, on the pages of

organization newsletters, and, as was the case with court-mandated school desegregation,

through declarations and testimony submitted to the court.

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Cognitive Mechanism

As the previous section makes clear, the effectiveness of political rhetoric is a function of

how policy issues are interpreted and understood. At the cognitive level, operating in the

background of policy debates, cultural characterizations of public education and its

beneficiaries influence the development of education policy by limiting the range of

policy alternatives deemed legitimate by stakeholders. Campbell distinguishes underlying

ideas held by policy elites (“paradigms”) from those held by the general public (“public

sentiments”). Paradigms are outcome-oriented assumptions that constrain policymaking

by structuring the alternatives perceived to be effective. For example, a basic paradigm at

the turn of the last century was the assumption that large, all-inclusive schools were the

best way to organize public education. Academics and education professionals theorized

the benefits of comprehensive schools, the business sector legitimated the form, and this

soon became a taken-for-granted way to organize. In recent decades, the paradigm has

lost ground to one that favors small, more personalized schools. The assumptions

underlying the new paradigm, like its predecessor, have been reinforced by scholars and

practitioners alike who theorize the benefits of small schools.

Public sentiments are collectively-held assumptions that dictate the

appropriateness of policy alternatives. Campbell emphasizes their normative nature—

public sentiments consist of non-outcome oriented opinions, values, identities, and

attitudes.138 A pervasive public sentiment is that public schools should be of uniform

quality and be universally available to all children. Proposed policies that violate this

sentiment face more difficulty than ones that are resonant with this sentiment. Kingdon’s

model calls attention to the political factors that can work for (or against) any policy

proposal, regardless of how complementary (or not) it may be to a policy problem. There

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is a cognitive component to this. Partisan concerns and ideology among policy elites as

well as public opinion and the “national mood” among the citizenry are political factors

that contribute to the policy making process.

To illustrate, consider John Skrentny’s (2006) study examining the relationship

between policy-elite perceptions of the meanings of social movements and policy

outcomes. Following the long struggle for affirmative action waged primarily by African

Americans, other communities of color—American Indians, Asian Americans, and

Latinos—were rapidly included in labor law protections. Over time, women were

eventually added. However, despite efforts to be included, white ethnics were not.

Skrentny approaches this puzzle by examining federal administrative archives and

reconstructing elite perceptions to determine the boundaries that shaped affirmative

action policy. He argues that the speed of group inclusion, the amount of mobilization

needed, and the possibility of failure depended on the perceived meanings of social

groups. Other communities of color were perceived to share definitional and moral

similarity to blacks, and were therefore rapidly incorporated. While women were

perceived to share moral similarity with blacks they were definitionally different. White

ethnics were perceived as both definitionally and morally different from blacks.139

Congnitive mechanisms also work at the mass level. Holly McCammon and

colleagues (2007) examine intra-state social movements to grant women the right to sit

on juries. During World Wars I and II, patriotism and democratic ideals became popular

sentiments. Movement participants who leveraged these collectively-held sentiments

were more likely to succeed. Namely, activism emphasizing the role women would play

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in support of the war effort through their service on juries (given that many potential

male jurors were drafted) was more successful.140

Constitutive Mechanism

Alternatives (“programs” in Campbell’s framework) are prescriptions that specify how

policy problems are to be solved. Current and future debates are constrained by the prior

adoption of alternatives into public law or policy, which locks in elements that, down the

line, come to be considered appropriate and legitimate by stakeholders. New policy

alternatives in education are influenced by the constitution of cultural characterizations of

public education and its beneficiaries in status quo policy. This is a process of path

dependence. Institutionalization constrains the range of alternatives available to

stakeholders, even those alternatives that may be more efficient in the long run.141

Returning to the example of school vouchers described above, consider the acceptance of

targeted voucher programs over universal voucher programs. If all families—privileged

or not—have access to vouchers of the same dollar amount, as in universal systems, the

equity framework falls apart. A reform that benefits everyone may improve the

achievement of students across the board but such a reform may not be perceived as

alleviating the achievement gap across communities, the primary aim of equity

proponents.

This line of research has extended our theoretical understanding of how culture, ideas,

and meaning influence policy. But it has yet to adequately examine how cultural

characterizations of and by racial and ethnic subgroups and their organizations matter. In

addition, this work has not addressed education, an institution that often serves as the

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point of entry for political engagement. Furthermore, this work has privileged federal-

level analyses at the expense of fully understanding the dynamics that emerge at lower

levels of government. Processes that develop at the federal level may not necessarily map

onto local contexts. These weaknesses serve as my point of departure and point to the

contribution the study seeks to make.

Context, Data, and Methods

Case study research provides an opportunity for theoretical elaboration and is often used

as a way to interpret and understand mechanisms leading to institutional or policy

change.142 As I describe, San Francisco provides a unique and well-suited vantage point

from which to examine the mechanisms by which cultural characterizations influence

student assignment policy. Such a study necessitates a wide angle. To explain the

political ebb and flow of student assignment, I examined the two sustained episodes of

community mobilization occurring during the focal period of 1971 to 2005, when San

Francisco was under court supervision to desegregate. Rather than focusing on the

activities of a single actor—say, the school district—I examined the interaction of various

stakeholders, both in favor of and opposed to the status quo student assignment policy,

within and across communities and organizations. Data are drawn primarily from archival

sources, contemporary newspaper accounts, and retrospective interviews with

stakeholders and informed observers.

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Case Selection

Selecting a large urban district allows for the incorporation of multiethnic politics into the

analysis since such districts often represent diverse class, racial, and ethnic groupings of

students. Education policies and practices in urban districts may be plausibly perceived to

benefit one racial or ethnic group at the expense of another. As a result, intergroup

cooperation and conflict are important dynamics that mediate the effectiveness of reform

efforts, particularly those that are meant to benefit a politically subordinate group. In

addition, large urban districts are likely to have a comparatively dense network of

community organizations, important vehicles for channeling resources and structuring

collaborative and contentious activity. Large urban districts are also likely to have a

greater amount of archival documents available to researchers.

The benefits of selecting a district with a long and varied history of desegregation

are obvious. A district that has struggled for decades to desegregate its schools is likely to

be a richer case with more interesting nuances than a district declared unitary shortly after

desegregation efforts began. In addition, given that the majority of school integration

literature addresses largely bipolar racial dynamics, selecting a district with significant

percentages of enrollees from multiple racial and ethnic subgroups allows for a much-

needed contribution to the multiethnic dynamics of community mobilization vis-à-vis

student assignment policy. Understanding such dynamics in situations where NAACP-led

campaigns, primarily concerned with improving the conditions of African American

students, confront resistance from other marginalized but politically emergent groups

such as Asian American and Latino communities is needed.

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San Francisco, California

San Francisco and its school district presents an ideal site for the study, meeting all of the

criteria described in the above paragraphs.143 Over the last several decades, San Francisco

has undergone sweeping demographic changes (see Table 1). Similar to other urban

centers in the West, San Francisco received a postwar influx of black families migrating

from the South. The city’s black population, which stood at 4,846 in 1940, had grown to

96,078 by 1970. In addition, Chinese, Mexican, Filipino and other communities in San

Francisco with long, multi-generational histories grew larger with the arrival of new

immigrant families following the 1965 passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act.

Table 1. San Francisco postwar demographic changes

Year White (%) Black (%) Chinese (%) Latino (%) Total

1940 602,701 95.0 4,846 0.8 17,782 2.8 N/A 634,536 1950 693,888 89.5 43,502 5.6 24,813 3.2 31,433 4.1 775,357 1960 604,403 81.6 78,383 10.6 36,445 4.9 51,602 7.0 740,316 1970 511,186 71.4 96,078 13.4 58,696 8.2 69,633 9.7 715,674 1980 360,841 53.1 84,334 12.4 82,244 12.1 84,194 12.4 678,974 1990 337,118 46.6 76,343 10.5 130,753 18.1 100,717 13.9 723,959 2000 338,909 43.6 58,791 7.6 152,620 19.6 109,504 14.1 776,733

Source: United States Census; Metropolitan Transportation Commission and Association of Bay Area Government, Bay Area Census website; Rose Hum Lee, “The Recent Immigrant Chinese Families of the San Francisco-Oakland Area,” Marriage and Family Living, 18 no. 1 (1956): 14-24. N.B. Questions and labels for racial and ethnic census categories have changed over time. Note the rapid rise and fall of San Francisco’s black population.

Within five years of Brown, communities had mobilized to address de facto school

segregation in the city, and political contention over the district’s student assignment

policy remains to this day. (Of course, as I describe in the introduction, the institution of

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school segregation in San Francisco, and community based efforts to dismantle it, did not

begin with Brown.) In addition, due to the city’s demographics, SFUSD is a racially

diverse district. Over the years, school board commissioner, superintendency, and

cabinet-level terms and positions have been filled by a racially diverse group of school

leaders. And even as far back as the 1960s, black, Latino, Chinese, Filipino and white

students comprised significant portions of the school population. In 1966, San Francisco

had the highest percentage of black (26 percent) and Chinese (14 percent) public school

students and the second lowest percentage of white (44 percent) public school students

among the 58 counties of California.144

The school system expanded rapidly in the years after World War II, adding more

than 25,000 students in two decades, and reaching a high of nearly 94,000 students in the

fall of 1967. By this point, San Francisco was one of the largest urban districts in the

nation. In the twelve years that followed, however, the district lost over 35,000 students

(see Figure 1). Subsequent to the 1971 implementation of the city’s elementary school

desegregation plan (dubbed “Horseshoe”), black students overtook white students as the

largest of the nine racial and ethnic subgroups the district tracked, a situation that lasted

throughout the 1970s. By the 1980s, Chinese students became the largest subgroup,

followed by Latino students. Today, whites are one of the smaller subgroups in the

district (see Figure 2). Despite the changes in the racial make-up of the city, up until the

1990s, desegregation has primarily been cast in black-white terms; Chinese and Latino

advocacy organizations were largely left out of formal desegregation negotiations.

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Figure 1. SFUSD, Student Enrollment, 1948-2009

Data Source: California Department of Education (1948-1965); Research, Planning, and Accountability Department, SFUSD (1965-2009).

0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

60,000

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80,000

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1948-49 1955-56 1962-63 1969-70 1976-77 1983-84 1990-91 1997-98 2004-05

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atio

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Figure 2. SFUSD, Student Enrollment by Four Largest Subgroups, 1965-2009

Data Source: Research, Planning, and Accountability Department, SFUSD. Note that African American students were the largest subgroup from 1971 to 1985. Chinese American students became the largest subgroup in 1985. Latino students became the second largest subgroup in 1989.

In addition, the agglomeration of civil society organizations in San Francisco adds to its

suitability as a case study site. From within its dense nonprofit and voluntary

organizational field, dozens of community organizations became involved in student

assignment issues over the years. In the decades following Brown, the NAACP was the

most prominent organization working on student assignment. Local members and leaders

as well as representatives from the national office were essential to the city’s school

0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

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1965-66 1969-70 1973-74 1977-78 1981-82 1985-86 1989-90 1993-94 1997-98 2001-02 2005-06

Stud

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nrol

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African AmericanChineseWhiteLatino

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desegregation effort. The Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund

(MALDEF), which for many years was headquartered in San Francisco, supported the

NAACP’s efforts but also fought to be included in desegregation discussions on behalf of

immigrants and English learners from the city’s Latino community. In addition to these

nationally prominent organizations, several other community organizations, came to be

involved through the years: Multicultural Education, Training, and Advocacy (META),

Chinese for Affirmative Action (CAA), Alianza, Coleman Advocates for Children and

Youth, Parents for Public Schools—San Francisco, and Parents for Neighborhood

Schools, among others. Over the past forty years, these organizations mobilized

thousands of parents, advocates, activists, and students on behalf of San Francisco’s

various student assignment policies. Finally, SFUSD is an appropriate site for the

practical reason that there are several entities within the school district, the government,

academia, and the local community that have archived source material directly relevant to

the study. I describe these sources in detail in the “Data Collection” section below.

Because of its protracted struggle with school integration, the variety of responses

from various constituent groups over time, its racial and ethnic diversity, and its dense

civil society network, San Francisco is a model case for examinations of community

mobilization and the local politics of race and student assignment. Context matters. All

districts have idiosyncratic features, and so studying a single school district risks

generalizability. An alternative design would be to compare across multiple districts, a

strategy that would thin intradistrict insights and analyses. Instead, the study compares

and analyzes across episodes of contention, organizations, interests, and institutional

realms within a single district. I strove to account for the local context while identifying

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factors and mechanisms generalizable to other urban communities and in other education

policy struggles. Community tensions, efforts to collaborate, attempts to frame issues and

identities in relation to pre-existing political actors, processes of intervention, and local

ideational dynamics in the face of a national campaign are comparable across multiple

contexts. In the narrative and conclusion, I draw out such similarities.

The period I examine is 1971 to 2005. Horseshoe, the court-ordered districtwide

plan, began busing elementary students for the purpose of desegregation on September

13, 1971. (The Richmond Complex, implemented the year before, represented a partial

desegregation effort voluntarily undertaken by the district.) Over the years, new

assignment plans would be proposed and adopted as old plans fell out of favor. The

district’s student assignment system would be under court supervision of one kind or

another until December 31, 2005. This thirty four year stretch divides into two episodes

of contention, the first lasting until 1983 when the school district and the San Francisco

chapter of the NAACP reached a settlement over a new student assignment plan,

Educational Redesign. The second episode of contention parallels the 1983 settlement,

which took the form of a federal consent decree that governed the district’s student

assignment policy, among other desegregative efforts, until it expired in 2005. Along the

way, a new assignment plan, the Diversity Index, was implemented. The three major

student assignment systems in place had varying degrees of success desegregating the

district. The district was the least racially segregated during the 1980s. During the 1990s

and, more rapidly, in the 2000s, the district resegregated. During the nearly three and a

half decades the study covers, the court, the district, and community stakeholders

contended with multiple competing and evolving conceptualizations of student

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assignment. Understanding the course, content, and impact of these conceptualizations

lies at the heart of the study.

Data Collection

Altogether, I drew from thousands of pages of archival documents, hundreds of

newspaper articles, and dozens of informant interviews. The bulk of the data collection

took place between April 2009 and June 2010. Data collection from the following sources

occurred more or less in parallel.

Federal District Court Records

I reviewed the docket files from three San Francisco school desegregation lawsuits,

Johnson v. SFUSD, SFNAACP v. SFUSD, and Ho v. SFUSD. The files contain

memoranda, orders, motions, court transcripts, briefs, and other documents submitted to

or issued by the court. Particularly for the last two cases (which covered more than a

quarter century of student assignment in San Francisco and filled thirty-one cartons in

total), the docket files include more than just courtroom activity. As parties prepared for

trial, the docket grew to include data and reports from the school district, memos and

other correspondence from school board members, superintendents, and district staff, and

letters to the court from parents, teachers, and students. These files proved to be the most

fruitful source of data for the study. The National Archives and Records Administration,

Pacific Region, in San Bruno, California, houses the Johnson records, the Federal

Records Center, also in San Bruno, houses the SFNAACP and Ho records.

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Organizational Records

I analyzed available documents including meeting minutes, newsletters, press releases,

and internal memos from community organizations working on issues related to San

Francisco’s student assignment policy during the focal period. These data were collected

from a variety of sources. For example, the California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives

(CEMA) at University of California, Santa Barbara holds records of the Chinese

American Democratic Club (CADC), an organization that spearheaded the Ho lawsuit

against the school district in the early 1990s. Stanford University maintains archived

records from Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF). The

Ethnic Studies Library at University of California, Berkeley holds newsletters, annual

reports, and other files of Chinese for Affirmative Action and the CADC. Records of the

Western Regional Office (Region I) of the NAACP are housed at Berkeley’s Bancroft

Library. In addition, Bancroft granted me access to unprocessed (i.e., yet to be archived)

records SFNAACP legal counsel compiled in preparation for trial in their 1978 lawsuit

against the school district. These records are extensive and contained personal memos,

district reports (obtained through discovery), meeting minutes, and other materials

relevant to my analysis. Records from the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By

Any Means Necessary, CADC, Parents for Public Schools—San Francisco, and a handful

of other community organizations were provided to me by former and current staff.

San Francisco Unified School District Records

I examined relevant school district records, including internal evaluations, superintendent

speeches, reports from the SFUSD Office of Integration, district bulletins, board circulars

and memoranda, and newsletters. Materials mandated by the Federal District Court,

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including changes to the student assignment policy, district enrollment and population

data, and New Views (1984-1988) and The Insider (1988-1992), two district newsletters

devoted to San Francisco’s desegregation efforts were also analyzed. The records of the

SFUSD are maintained at the Daniel E. Koshland San Francisco History Center at the

San Francisco Main Library. At the Hoover Institution Archives at Stanford University, I

reviewed miscellaneous papers of Superintendent Robert F. Alioto (1975-1985). Among

other items, these records include public comments by Alioto and contemporary San

Francisco Civil Grand Jury Reports on school desegregation. I also acquired several

documents directly from the school district and board of education, including meeting

minutes, historical student demographic information, miscellaneous papers, and various

reports and publications on student assignment. The bulk of materials spanned 1965 to

2000. These data help reveal the institutional stance of the school district to students,

parents, and the broader San Francisco public.

Mainstream and Community Newspapers

I analyzed just over 800 newspaper articles, letters to the editor, and opinion pieces

pertaining to San Francisco’s student assignment plan, the use of race and other factors in

assigning students to schools, and desegregation lawsuits filed against the district during

the study’s focal period. Newspapers were a useful source for capturing the political

rhetoric employed by stakeholders. While editorials do not necessarily capture

community sentiment, they do offer insight into which policy issues are important during

a particular period of time, how issues are generally perceived, and, often, the ideas

political contention are organized around. I sought to compile a comprehensive corpus of

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items from the more prominent of the city’s two dailies, the San Francisco Chronicle,

from 1971 to 2005. I identified items published prior to 1995 using subject indexes.

Articles from 1995 to the present are available on the Internet and were compiled using

the Chronicle’s online keyword search tool. To the Chronicle corpus, I added several

dozen articles from the San Francisco Examiner, San Francisco Independent, New York

Times, San Jose Mercury News, Education Week, and several other publications. Articles

from these papers were identified using Google’s News Archive Search feature, Lexis-

Nexis Academic, and the NewsBank, Inc. America’s Newspapers database.

To insure that a full range of stakeholder political rhetoric and activity was

captured, I collected articles from several community newspapers. Articles from The

Recorder and The Daily Journal, San Francisco’s two legal newspapers were provided to

me by a CADC board member. I compiled articles from the Chinese language Sing Tao

Daily, the most prominent of the Chinese language newspapers during the focal period.

Most of these articles were collected at Sing Tao’s newspaper morgue, which warehouses

newspapers from 1993 on. Because there was no subject index available, identifying

relevant items from Sing Tao required a review, one-by-one, of the main and metro

newspaper sections. A list of date ranges during which some substantive activity relating

to student assignment took place (e.g., a school board meeting, a court ruling, the first

day of school) was used to narrow the number of newspapers reviewed. More recent

articles (generally, from 2002 to the present) were available through an online search that

took place at Sing Tao’s Bay Area headquarters. Articles from Chinese Times, another

local Chinese language newspaper were also analyzed. These articles were available

through the Him Mark Lai collection at the University of California, Berkeley Ethnic

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Studies Library. The identification and translation of relevant articles were conducted by

three bilingual research assistants. Articles from AsianWeek, an English language

newspaper, were collected through both an online search and a microfilm review that

focused on particular date ranges, similar to the Sing Tao process. Articles from the San

Francisco Sun-Reporter and, to a lesser extent, the San Francisco BayView, both of

which serves the local African American community, were identified through the

ProQuest Ethnic News Watch, a microfilm review, and an Internet search. (I

contemplated a similar analysis of Spanish-language newspapers. However, several

knowledgeable people suggested that this might be less fruitful since for San Francisco’s

Spanish speaking community, student assignment and other education issues were

typically addressed through community meetings, local television, and radio. I was able

to incorporate the perspective of Latino-serving community organizations and leaders

through other data sources. But, this is certainly an area for future investigation.)

Informant Interviews

In order to illuminate and inform data gathered from archival and media sources, I

conducted 67 semi-structured, open-ended interviews with organizational leaders, district

officials, and other informants intimately knowledgeable of the student assignment policy

during the focal period. Retrospective interviews are not without problems. What we

recall often differs from what actually happened. In order to minimize the “risks”

involved with retrospective interviews, I relied on this source primarily as a means of

enhancing and verifying the data provided by archival materials. Informants include

executive staff, board members, and parent leaders from organizations involved in

student assignment and other education advocacy efforts in San Francisco (40); school

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board members (17); attorneys involved with the lawsuits and court-appointed

monitors/experts (6); and, pertinent senior school district staff (4). A list of informants

and interview dates is provided in Appendix A.

Separate interview protocols were created for each of the following informant

categories: policy elites, community mobilizers, and general influentials.145 Interviews

began with a brief introduction of the interviewer, the purpose of the study, and the other

constituent groups that would be interviewed. The core interview questions asked

informants to “map out” the political landscape of San Francisco’s school assignment

issue by reflecting on the (a) the various sides of the debate, (b) the motivations and

incentives of community stakeholders, (c) the different ways community stakeholders

“get things done,” (d) the alliances and partnerships community stakeholders make, and

(e) the relationship between civic engagement and the timing, content, and fate of San

Francisco’s school assignment policy. The interviews closed with the opportunity for

respondents to share any final thoughts on issues related to student assignment. Sample

interview questions are provided in Appendix B. The average interview was 70 minutes

long; interviews ranged from 30 minutes to 2½ hours. All but a handful of interviews

were conducted in person, digitally recorded, and professionally transcribed. In addition,

I had thirteen informal conversations with individuals possessing perspectives on and

informed knowledge of various aspects of the student assignment plan. Although these

conversations weren’t recorded or analyzed, they helped to inform my general

understanding of the political lay of the land.

Rather quickly, three analytical categories—school integration, school choice, and

neighborhood schools—emerged as the primary logics through which stakeholders

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framed, understood, and shaped student assignment. The centrality of the categories

persisted as I added data from additional sources: organizational records, newspapers,

and school district records. The three analytical categories became the basis for the

remainder of the analysis and eventually served to structure the dissertation narrative. For

further details, refer to the Methodological Addendum. A table summarizing sources,

data, and analyses is included in Appendix E.

The analysis presented in the dissertation is divided into two parts, each with a class

action lawsuit against the school district at its analytical core, and each focused on the

politics that structured a transition from one student assignment system to another, under

court-supervision. In each case, the new system embodied a fundamentally different

understanding of student assignment and was a source of political contention as different

community stakeholders sought to protect or dismantle the status quo system. The central

story of Part One is the replacement of a bipolar desegregation framework with a

multipolar integration framework. During the 1970s, Operation Integrate, a systemwide

desegregation plan that included Horseshoe, an earlier plan for just the elementary

grades, was replaced by Educational Redesign. Operation Integrate and Educational

Redesign were instantiations of two oppositional discourses and understandings of

integration, racial balance, and desegregation. Where Operation Integrate was devised

primarily as a means to balance the ratio of white students to black students in every

school, Educational Redesign was developed to insure that none of the district’s nine

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recognized racial and ethnic subgroups would dominate any one school. While

integration was the central logic of action, the two plans contained elements of two

additional competing logics, choice and neighborhood. Choice began as an aspect of

Horseshoe and Operation Integrate that was primarily understood to be a means of

avoiding desegregated schools. With Educational Redesign, choice evolved into an

ancillary, yet important part of the district’s voluntary desegregation program.

Neighborhood schools, the taken for granted pre-desegregation method of student

assignment, remained a powerful logic throughout this period, and was strengthened with

the implementation of Educational Redesign. During this period, the SFNAACP was the

district’s most powerful and vocal opponent. Once the Board of Education gave its final

approval of Educational Redesign, the chapter filed a class action lawsuit against the

SFUSD (its fifth in sixteen years) calling for the preservation of Operation Integrate.

Part Two addresses a second transition in the district’s student assignment plan.

The central story here is the replacement of a race conscious integration framework with

a race neutral diversity framework. Throughout most of the 1980s and 1990s, the district

operated under a federal consent decree that called for the elimination of racial

segregation in the district and improved academic achievement of underserved students.

For nearly sixteen years, the decree mandated that the district assign students in a manner

based principally on Educational Redesign. Following a class action lawsuit filed on

behalf of Chinese American students in the district, the district switched to a system that

used a set of factors based roughly on socioeconomic status as a means of creating

diverse schools. The method was named the Diversity Index Lottery and it elevated

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school choice as the primary assignment mechanism. As before, neighborhood remained

an important logic of action.

Educational Redesign, when properly enforced, led to an extended period of

desegregated schools in San Francisco. But it was short-lived. Although the second half

of the consent decree eliminated the use of racial classifications in the assignment of

students to schools, the desegregative goal of the consent decree remained. However, the

Diversity Index was a poor instrument for achieving the goal, and the district quickly

resegregated. A central theme discussed in the dissertation is the decline of school

desegregation. With it came the rise of school choice, from an ancillary (and often, a

loophole) mechanism of student assignment in San Francisco to its central mechanism.

Throughout the nearly three and a half decades of court supervision, the neighborhood

remained a resilient logic of action, although neighborhood schools were understood,

framed, and applied differently across periods of contention.

The dissertation proceeds as follows. Part One is divided into three analytical

sections and a fourth concluding section. Each section corresponds to one of the three

logics of action that governed student assignment, integration, neighborhood, and choice,

in that order. The chapter opens with the public introduction of Educational Redesign on

December 28, 1977. From there, it skips back to the early seventies when first Horseshoe

and then Operation Integrate are implemented, and tracks forward to the 1978 filing of

the SFNAACP lawsuit and the various pre-trial activities among parties. Part One ends

on a hopeful note, with the court approval of a consent decree settlement between the

SFNAACP and the school district. Part Two is similarly structured, but the analytical

sections are ordered integration, choice, and then neighborhood, followed by a

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concluding section. Some significant changes took place over the first decade of the

consent decree. After describing these changes, the narrative begins in earnest with the

1992 submission of a major evaluation of the consent decree and the opportunity it

represented for both the decree’s proponents and opponents. New stakeholders emerged

and the institutional environment changed. At this point, the desegregative priorities of

the SFNAACP and the SFUSD were aligned, and it was a new group of claimants

seeking changes to the student assignment system. In both Part One and Part Two, the

community mobilization taking place within the district is situated in broader societal

changes taking place beyond the district—across California and the nation as a whole. In

the final chapter, I reflect on 34 years of community mobilization, racial politics, and the

student assignment system in San Francisco and underscore the principal contributions

the dissertation provides.

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Notes

1. Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483 (1954). Linda Brown was denied admission to her neighborhood elementary school because she was black. Her lawsuit was combined with similar cases from South Carolina, Virginia, and Delaware. In overturning the “separate but equal” doctrine, the Court stated for the first time that legalized segregation in public schools violated equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution; Of course, Brown was merely one of many components of desegregation. A string of rulings that served to strengthen and clarify school desegregation trailed Brown. In addition, with the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Justice Department was able to take an active role in school desegregation.

2. For a detailed history of NAACP’s struggle to overturn legal school segregation, see Mark V. Tushnet, The NAACP's Legal Strategy Against Segregated Education, 1925-1950 (The University of North Carolina Press, 1987); Richard Kluger, Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black America's Struggle for Equality (New York: Vintage, 2004).

3. Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896). Homer Plessy was considered to be “colored” under Louisiana law and was required to sit in the “colored” car of a train. He argued unsuccessfully that separate cars violated the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The ruling allowed for a “separate but equal” distinction that extended to restaurants, public transportation, restroom facilities, and schools.

4. Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada, 305 U.S. 337; Sipuel v. Oklahoma, 332 U.S. 631, and McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents, 339 U.S. 637. In Sweatt v. Painter, 339 U.S. 629 (1950), which dealt with the University of Texas Law School’s denial of admission of an African American applicant, the Supreme Court determined that a separate legal education could not be equal. But justices reserved judgment on public education.

5. Brown, 347 U.S. at 493.

6. Gary Orfield and others, Deepening Segregation in American Public Schools (Harvard Project on School Desegregation, 1997).

7. A reliable source for the total number of schools and school districts under court order to desegregate and/or under a voluntarily imposed program to desegregate could not be found. In the 1970s, the Department of Justice supervised cases representing 540 school districts. As of 2007, the United States was a party to 266 school desegregation lawsuits. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Becoming Less Separate? School Desegregation, Justice Department Enforcement, and the Pursuit of Unitary Status (Washington, D.C., 2007).

8. Charles Clotfelter, After Brown. The Rise and Retreat of School Desegregation (Princeton University Press, 2004); Gary Orfield and Chungmei Lee, Historic Reversals, Accelerating Resegregation, and the Need for New Integration Strategies (The Civil Rights Project/Proyecto Derechos Civiles, University of California, Los Angeles, 2007).

9. Parents Involved in Community Schools, Petitioner v. Seattle School District No. 1, et al.; Meredith v. Jefferson County Board of Education, 551 U.S. 701 (2007). The judicial conservatism trend is

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typically described as beginning in 1974 with Milliken v. Bradley, 418 U.S. 717 (1974), which placed severe limits on city-suburban school desegregation, making it near impossible to desegregate metropolitan areas where minorities are concentrated in central cities.

10. Clotfelter, After Brown; Orfield and others, Deepening Segregation.

11. David L. Kirp, Just Schools: The Idea of Racial Equality in American Education (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982), 82.

12. Pelton continues: “Our thirty-six Public Schools… better than all things else, and more truly, represent the public spirit and intelligence of our community; and thus, these argue most favorably for the future character of our people and the permanence of our prosperity.” John C. Pelton, “Annual Report of the Superintendent of Public Schools for the Year Ending October 15th, 1867.” Box 79, San Francisco Unified School District Records, San Francisco History Center (hereafter SFHC).

13. California Statutes of 1851, Chapter 126, Article III, Sec. 1. In “Statutory Segregation of Public School Children by Race in California: 1851-1948” (undated memo). Carton 131, Folder: “California Statutes, Codes, etc.” Material Prepared by Legal Counsel for Use in Pending Suit Brought Against the San Francisco Unified School District, BANC MSS 84/175c. The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (hereafter BANC MSS 84/175c). The memo notes that prior to 1872, California codes regarding education were part of the general state statutes. In 1872, they were moved to the Political Code. In 1929, California established a separate School Code, which, in 1943, became the California Education Code; While 1851 marks the formal start of California’s public education system, the “inauguration of free schools on the Pacific Coast” began in 1849. Pelton, “Annual Report, 1867.” Box 79, SFHC; For a detailed history of school segregation in California, see Charles Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed. Segregation and exclusion in California schools, 1855-1975 (University of California Press, 1976).

14. St. Cyprian A.M.E. was located on Jackson Street and Virginia Place (between Stockton and Powell Streets). Pelton, “Annual Report, 1867.” Box 79, SFHC; St. Cyprian became the basis for Bethel AME (see Philip M. Montesano, “San Francisco Black Churches in the Early 1860’s: Political Pressure Group,” California Historical Quarterly, 52 no 2 (1973): 145-152); Other cities would follow, and by 1873 there were a reported 21 public schools in California for what was then referred to as “colored” students. Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 10-11; See also Quintin Taylor, In Search of the Racial Frontier: African Americans in the West, 1528-1990 (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1998).

15. Quote from Nubia, “Progress of the Colored People of San Francisco,” Frederick Douglass’ Paper, September 22, 1854; On Moore’s prominence, see Montesano, “San Francisco Black Churches”; Meredith Eliassen, “A ‘Colored’ Mosaic: A Vibrant African American Community in Antebellum San Francisco,” California State Library Association Bulletin, 84 (2006): 11-16.

16. The church operated school for Chinese students as early as 1853. Sometime between 1857 and 1859, the church hosted the Chinese public school. Wollenberg (1976). See Francis Yung Chang (1936). Pelton, Annual Report, 1867. Box 79, SFHC; See also Notice of Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. SFNAACP v. SFUSD, Docket File 190, filed 6/6/80, hereafter: (DF190, 6/6/80); Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 32.

17. “Of Schools,” Sections 56-58. Pelton, Annual Report, 1867. Box 79, SFHC; Section 53 restricted general admission into public schools to white children. BANC MSS 84/175c, Carton 131 “California Statutes, Codes, etc.”; On the Chinese School, see Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 34.

18. Ward v. Flood, 48 Cal. 36 (1874), 39, 52-57.

19. On the San Francisco school board decision: Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 27; The Pacific Appeal, “The Abolishment of Separate Schools for Colored Children,” August 7, 1875; On the

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1880 legislative change: “Statutory Segregation” (undated memo). Carton 131, Folder: “California Statutes, Codes, etc.” BANC MSS 84/175c; Section 1662 stated that “schools must be open for the admission of all children.” Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 25.

20. Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 34-38.

21. The district justified its actions by pointing to a provision in the school law that allowed the exclusion of “the vicious, the filthy and those having contagious and infectious diseases.” The courts determined that these conditions could only apply on an individual basis rather than on group stereotypes. Tape v. Hurley, 66 Cal. Rptr. 473 (1885).

22. School Law of California (1885) §1662. In “Statutory Segregation” (undated memo). Carton 131, Folder: “California Statutes, Codes, etc.” BANC MSS 84/175c; Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 41-43; Wong Him v. Callahan, 119 Fed. 381 (1902) established that California’s segregative policy was in accordance with federal law.

23. A legal question over whether Japanese students could legally be segregated emerged, as the language of the school law provided for the segregation of only “Chinese and Mongolians.” Wollenberg, All Deliberate Speed, 54.

24. Political Code of 1921, 438. In “Statutory Segregation” (undated memo). Carton 131, Folder: “California Statutes, Codes, etc.” BANC MSS 84/175c.

25. California Education Code, §8003, 8004 (since repealed). In “Statutory Segregation” (undated memo). Carton 131, Folder: “California Statutes, Codes, etc.” BANC MSS 84/175c.

26. Minutes of the Board of Education, May 18, 1926. In Preble Stolz, Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley to Irving G. Breyer, Legal Advisor, SFUSD February 27, 1963. Box 133, Folder: “Art Brunwasser Materials” BANC 84/175c.

27. Irving G. Hendrick, “The Education of Non-Whites in California, 1849-1970 ,” (San Francisco: R&E Research Associates, 1977).

28. Mendez v. Westminster School District of Orange County, 64 F. Supp. 544 (1946). Organizational support for the lawsuit was through LULAC, Santa Ana Chapter No. 147. Christopher Arriola, “Knocking on the Schoolhouse Door: Mendez v. Westminster, Equal Protection, Public Education, and Mexican Americans in the 1940’s,” La Raza Law Journal 8 no. 166 (1995): 160-207.

29. For example, the official policy of the El Modena school board required “persons of Mexican descent who were unfamiliar with the English language be required to attend one of the schools set apart.” (Transcript of Proceedings, Mendez v. Westminster. In Arriola, “Knocking on the Schoolhouse Door.”

30. Mendez, 64 F. Supp. at 549. Mexican and white students were considered to be of the same race. Thus, the court found the school districts to have discriminated on the basis of national origin.

31. The district court’s ruling was affirmed on an appeal that largely argued the federal courts lacked jurisdiction over the state-run public education system. Westminster v. Mendez, 161 F. 2d 774 (1947).

32. California Education Code, §8003, 8004 (since repealed) . In “Statutory Segregation” (undated memo). Carton 131, Folder: “California Statutes, Codes, etc.” BANC MSS 84/175c. See also Westminster, 161 F.2d at 780.

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33. The Sun-Reporter, “We Must Study Our School System,” Editorial, June 13, 1959.

34 Ibid.; The Sun-Reporter, “S.O.S. Confab a Success,” July 11, 1959; The Sun-Reporter, “S.O.S. Confab Set for Aug. 3,” July 18, 1959; On Spears testimony: Kirp, Just Schools, 85.

35. Robert L. Carter to Northern Branches, Area and State Conferences (memorandum), October 6, 1961. Carton 57, Folder 78, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Region I, Records, BANC MSS 78/180c, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (hereafter BANC MSS 78/180c).

36. Testimony of Wilfred T. Ussery, Chair of the San Francisco Chapter of CORE. Transcript of the Regular meeting of the Board of Education, September 18, 1962. SFHC. Ussery continues: “That this Board did not affirmatively cause the segregation which exists here in San Francisco does not make such education any the less inferior.”

37. San Francisco Chronicle, “NAACP’s 10-Year Campaign,” July 10, 1971.

38. New York Times, “Schools in West Hit. NAACP Reports Finding Segregation in Survey,” April 21, 1962.

39. Superintendent of Schools Harold Spears asked, “Is it segregation to require children to attend the school in their own neighborhood?” Wallace Turner, “Negroes on Coast Ask School Shift,” New York Times, August 5, 1962.

40. Central was to occupy the old site of Lowell High School, which, following the 1956 issuance of a bond, had moved to the Lakeshore neighborhood.

41. Wallace Turner, “Negroes on Coast Ask School Shift,” New York Times, August 5, 1962. Terry Francois would go on to become San Francisco’s first African American Supervisor.

42. San Francisco Chronicle, “The Integration Pattern in S.F.,” Editorial, July 23, 1962. An alternate perspective was put forth by the San Francisco Bulletin: “It would be folly to gerrymander the district out of all semblance of administrative sanity.” Quoted in John Kaplan, “San Francisco” [Condensed from “Race and Education in San Francisco,” a report to the United States Commissioner of Education], Law & Society Review 2 no. 1 (1967): 71

43. Claimants sought an 80-20 white to non-white ratio for the school. The suit was brought on behalf of five white and four black children from Grattan (including McMurtry’s daughter); Kaplan, “San Francisco; Stephen S. Weiner, “Educational decisions in an organized anarchy,” (PhD diss., Stanford University, 1972); Stephen S. Weiner, “Participation, Deadlines, and Choice,” in Ambiguity and Choice in Organizations, 2nd edition, ed. James G. March and Johan P. Olsen, 225-250 (Bergen, Norway: Universitetsforlaget, 1979); McMurtry quoted in San Francisco Chronicle, “A Challenge in Court on Central High,” August 15, 1962; Correspondence from Citizens Committee for Neighborhood Schools in Harold Spears, Superintendent (Internal Memo), August, 1963, Box 31, SFHC; Zirpoli quoted in New York Times, “A Racial Dispute Averted on Coast,” August 26, 1962.

44. Brock v. Board of Education, No. 71034, N.D. California (1962). The lawsuit was filed on October 2, 1962 behalf of 159 black and white students.

45. California Administrative Code, Title 5, Education, §2010 (approved October 23, 1962).

46. Report of the Ad Hoc Committee of the Board of Education to Study Ethnic Factors in the San Francisco Public Schools, April 2, 1963. Box 93, SFHC; In September, the board appointed an ad hoc “Committee to Study Ethnic Factors in San Francisco Schools” to help quell the debate. Board president

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Samuel A. Ladar appointed Mrs. Edward Matzger, Joseph A. Moore, Jr., and James E. Stratten to the committee. Board of Education Resolution #29-18A1, September 18, 1962. SFHC.

47. Breyer to Ad Hoc Committee Meeting, San Francisco Public Schools (Memo), November 15, 1962. In Plaintiffs Fourth Request for Production of Documents, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF100, c8/79).

48. Report of the Ad Hoc Committee of the Board of Education to Study Ethnic Factors in the San Francisco Public Schools, April 2, 1963. Box 93, SFHC.

49. The suit was allowed to be dismissed in December 1964 following the hiring of a black human relations officer and the assignment of hundreds of minority students to predominantly white schools. Luis R. Fraga and others, “Consensus Building and School Reform: The Role of the Courts in San Francisco,” in Changing Urban Education, ed., Clarence N. Stone, Ed., 66-92 (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1998); An alternate perspective is provided in Weiner, Educational Decisions, 47: the SFNAACP dropped its suit “because of the legal difficulties they foresaw in obtaining a favorable judicial ruling.”

50. See Weiner, “Educational Decisions”; Kaplan, “San Francisco”; Arthur Brunwasser, Letter to the Editor, Commentary, July 1972; These data were kept confidential until 1965.

51. Kaplan 1967. The Superintendent sought the data release amid employment discrimination investigations by the California Fair Employment Practices Commission and the U.S. Office of Education.

52. The racial categories used by the district were: Negro, Oriental, and White.

53. James Benet, “Race Patterns in S.F. Schools are Revealed,” San Francisco Chronicle, August 5, 1965.

54. San Francisco Chronicle, “Racial Disparity in S.F. Schools,” Editorial, August 6, 1965.

55. A Report on the Planning and Implementation of the Richmond Educational Complex, 1970-1971. Office of Innovative Planning, SFUSD. Box 95, SFHC.

56. Statement of Grandvel A. Jackson, February 7, 1983. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF293; 2/7/83).

57. Doris R. Fine, When leadership fails: Desegregation and demoralization in the San Francisco schools. (New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1986); Weiner, “Educational Decisions”; Weiner, “Participation, Deadlines, and Choice.)

58. Weiner, “Educational Decisions”. After years of resistance from the school district, Mayor John Shelley was persuaded by advocates to appoint Dr. Laurel Glass, Alan Nichols, and Dr. Zuretti Goosby. Mayor Joseph Alioto (a busing opponent who was formerly special counsel to the school district for the Brock lawsuit) appointed Dr. David Sanchez and Howard Nemerovski. All of these appointees supported some degree of racial balance (Weiner, 1979).

59. A Report on the Planning and Implementation of the Richmond Educational Complex, 1970-1971. Office of Innovative Planning, SFUSD. SFHC.

60. The Citizens Advisory Committee was appointed April 1968.

61. A Report on the Planning and Implementation of the Richmond Educational Complex, 1970-1971. Office of Innovative Planning, SFUSD. SFHC.

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62. Ibid.; Weiner, 1972.

63. Ron Moskowitz, “S.F. Step for New ‘Cluster’ School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, February 25, 1969.

64. See, for example, Charles Howe, “The ‘Goons’ who Struck at the School Meeting,” San Francisco Chronicle, February 27, 1969.

65. Board approval was contingent on the submission of supplementary information regarding funding, transportation, school-community involvement, facilities, feeder patters, instructional arrangements, staffing, and evaluation. A Report on the Planning and Implementation of the Richmond Educational Complex, 1970-1971. Office of Innovative Planning, SFUSD. SFHC.

66. Johnson v. San Francisco Unified School District, 339 F. Supp. 1315 (1971), vacated and remanded, 500 F.2d 349 (1974). The suit was filed on behalf of six African American students. The named plaintiff’s daughter, Patricia Johnson, attended Dudley Stone School, which was 74.9 percent black. The suit maintained that 80 percent of San Francisco’s black elementary students attended 29 segregated schools that ranged from 61.7 percent to 96.8 percent black; For a legal history of school segregation in San Francisco through 1978, see Civil Rights Action for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, Class Action. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1, 6/30/78).

67. Ron Muskowitz, “S.F. Schools Sued on Desegregation,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 25, 1970.

68. Clarence N. Stone, Regime Politics. Governing Atlanta, 1946-1988 (University Press of Kansas, 1989), 219.

69. Although civil society is often portrayed as cohesive sphere of organizational action, it is not. For example, in certain contexts, black, Asian, and Latino civil society overlap partially but not completely, and civil society organizations often compete and clash with one another.

70. Clarence N. Stone and others. Building Civic Capacity. The Politics of Reforming Urban Schools (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2001); Susan E. Clarke and others. Multiethinc Moments. The Politics of Urban Education Reform (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2006).

71. Stone, Regime Politics; Karen Mossberger and Gerry Stoker, “The Evolution of Urban Regime Theory. The Challenge of Conceptualization,” Urban Affairs Review , 36 no. 6 (2001): 810-835; Jonathan S. Davies, “Partnerships Versus Regimes: Why Regime Theory Cannot Explain Urban Coalitions in the UK,” Journal of Urban Affairs, 25 no. 3 (2003): 253-269.

72. An early question facing urbanists was the source of power in cities, and what consequences this had for social stratification. Stone argued that power emerged from Atlanta’s urban regime, representing “middle ground” between pluralist notions that power is contained within government authority and structuralist notions that power is held by economic forces. Systemic power is “that dimension of power in which durable features of the socioeconomic system confer advantages and disadvantages on groups in ways predisposing public officials to favor some interests at the expense of others… because its operation is completely impersonal and deeply embedded in the social structure, this form of power can appropriately be termed ‘systemic.’” Clarence N. Stone, “Systemic Power in Community Decision Making: A Restatement of Stratification Theory,” The American Political Science Review, 74 no. 4 (1980): 978-990, 980.

73. Stone, Regime Politics; Mossberger and Stoker, “Evolution of Urban Regime Theory.”

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74. With regard to school desegregation, in exchange for hiring a black superintendent the

district received support from black community leaders in its effort to delay the implementation of integration.

75. Stone and others, Building Civic Capacity.

76. Ibid., Stone, Regime Politics; Jeffrey R. Henig and others, The Color of School Reform. Race, Politics, and the Challenge of Urban Education (Princeton University Press, 1999); John Portz and others, City Schools and City Politics: Institutions and Leadership in Pittsburgh, Boston, and St. Louis (University Press of Kansas, 1999); Clarke and others, Multiethnic Moments.

77. The central source of data for these studies are in-depth interviews with stakeholders inside and outside the local school bureaucracy, what the authors describe as education specialists, “general influentials,” and community representatives. In addition, aggregate data on socioeconomic, demographic, and educational trends were collected and analyzed for each city.

78. David Tyack and Larry Cuban, Tinkering toward Utopia: A Century of Public School Reform (Harvard University Press, 1997); Cynthia E. Coburn, “Rethinking scale: Moving Beyond Numbers to Deep and Lasting Change,” Educational Researcher 32, no. 6 (2003): 3-12; Larry Cuban, “Reforming Again, Again, and Again,” Educational Researcher 19 no. 1 (1990): 3-13.

79. Clarke and others, Multiethnic Moments, 187.

80 Stone, Changing Urban Education, x.

81. See, for example, Marion Orr, “The Challenge of School Reform in Baltimore: Race, Jobs, and Politics,” in Changing Urban Education, ed. Clarence N. Stone (University Press of Kansas, 1998), 93-117; Jeff Henig and others, The Color of School Reform: Race Politics, and the Challenge of Urban Education (Princeton University Press, 1999).

82. For instance, community interests were at loggerheads over teacher accountability measures. Some saw teacher accountability as a viable route to student achievement, others perceived this as a threat to job security. The issue was complicated by the fact that the profession of teaching has been an important route to middle class for African Americans. Although in the past, black clergy were vocal advocates for teacher accountability measures, following the transition from a white to a black establishment in these cities, clergy were more likely to support teacher unions. Henig and others, Color of School Reform.

83. Portz and others, City Schools and City Politics; Frederick M. Hess, Spinning Wheels: The Politics of Urban School Reform (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 1998).

84. Clarke and others, Multiethnic Moments, 171, 175.

85. Chris Ansell and Alison Gash, “Collaborative Governance in Theory and Practice,” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory , 18 no. 4 (2008): 543-571; Archon Fung and Erik O. Wright, “Deepening Democracy: Innovations in Empowered Participatory Governance,” Politics and Society 29 no. 1 (2001): 5-41; Archon Fung, “Deliberative Democracy, Chicago Style: Grass-roots Governance in Policing and Public Education.” In Deepening Democracy: Institutional Innovations in Empowered Participatory Governance, ed. Archon Fung and Erick O. Wright, 111-143 (New York: Verso, 2003).

86. Ansell and Gash, “Collaborative Governance.”

87. James S. Coleman, “Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital,” American Journal of Sociology , 94 (1998): S95-S120; Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone : The Collapse and Revival of

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American Community (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000); Social capital is one of the contributions of local community organizations, regardless if they are involved in the political process. Peter Frumkin, On Being Nonprofit: A Conceptual and Policy Primer (Harvard University Press, 2005).

88. Robert J Sampson and others, “Neighborhoods and Violent Crime: A Multilevel Study of Collective Efficacy,” Science , 277 no. 5328 (1997): 918-924, 918; Among education researchers, this framework has been applied to understand the role of teacher efficacy collectively within schools. See Megan Tschannen-Moran and others, “Teacher Efficacy: Its Meaning and Measure,” Review of Educational Research, 68 no. 2 (1998): 202-248; Roger D. Goddard, “Collective Efficacy Beliefs:Theoretical Developments, Empirical Evidence, and Future Directions,” Educational Researcher, 33 no. 3 (2004): 3-13.

89. Stone and others, Building Civic Capacity.

90. Sidney Tarrow and Charles Tilly, Contentious Politics (Paradigm Publishers, 2006), 4.

91. Doug McAdam and others, Dynamics of Contention (Cambridge University Press, 2001).

92. Archon Fung, “Associations and Democracy: Between Theories, Hopes, and Realities,” Annual Review of Sociology , 29 (2003): 515-539; Kenneth T. Andrews and Bob Edwards, “Advocacy Organizations in the U.S. Political Process,” Annual Review of Sociology , 30 (2004): 479-506; Frumkin, On Being Nonprofit; J. Craig Jenkins, “Nonprofit Organizations and Political Advocacy,” in The Nonprofit Sector: A Research Handbook, 2nd edition, ed. Walter W. Powell and Richard Steinberg, 307-332 (Yale University Press, 2006).

93. Frumkin, On Being Nonprofit, 30.

94. McAdam and others, Dynamics of Contention; Andres and Edwards, “Advocacy Organizations.”

95. Sarah Deschenes and others, “Nonprofit Community Organizations in Poor Urban Settings: Bridging Institutional Gaps for Youth.” in The Nonprofit Sector. A Research Handbook, 2nd Edition, ed. Walter W. Powell and Richard. Steinberg, 506-517 (Yale University Press, 2006).

96. Milbrey McLaughlin and others, Between Movement and Establishment: Organizations Advocating for Youth. (Stanford University Press, 2009), 157.

97. Deschenes, “Nonprofit Community Organizations.”

98. Frumkin, On Being Nonprofit; Fung, “Associations and Democracy.”

99. Tarrow and Tilly, Contentious Politics, 111.

100. David A. Snow and Sarah A. Soule, A Primer on Social Movements, W. W. Norton & Company, 2009), 16.

101. John McCarthy and Mayer Zald, “Resource Mobilization and Social Movements: A Partial Theory,” American Journal of Sociology, 82, no. 6 (1977): 1212-1241.

102. Although many struggles throughout history and around the world do not rely on formal organizations, this is a useful perspective for understanding organized wings of movements, particularly in the West.

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103. Doug McAdam, Political Process and the Development of Black Insurgency, 1930-1970, 2nd

Edition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999).

104. David A. Snow and others “Frame Alignment Processes, Micromobilization, and Movement Participation,” American Sociological Review, 51 no. 4 (1986): 464-481.

105. David M. Cress and David A. Snow, “The Outcomes of Homeless Mobilization: The Influence of Organization, Disruption, Political Mediation, and Framing,” American Journal of Sociology, 105 no. 4 (2000): 1063-1104.

106. McAdam and others, Dynamics of Contention; Tilly and Tarrow, Contentious Politics.

107. McAdam and others, Dynamics of Contention.

108. Ibid.

109. John Campbell, Institutional Change and Globalization, (Princeton University Press, 2004); Brian Steensland, “Cultural Categories and the American Welfare State: The Case of Guaranteed Income Policy,” American Journal of Sociology, 111 no. 5: 1273-13266; Anne Schneider and Helen Ingram, “Social Construction of Target Populations: Implications for Politics and Policy,” American Political Science Review, 87 no. 2 (1993): 334-347; John W. Kingdon, Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies, 2nd Edition (Longman Publishing group, 2002); Robert O. Self, American Babylon. Race and the Struggle for Postwar Oakland (Princeton University Press, 2003); Deborah Stone, Policy Paradox: The Art of Political Decision Making (Scranton, PA: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002).

110. Paul DiMaggio and Walter W. Powell. “The Iron Cage Revisited: Institutional Isomorphism and Collective Rationality in Organizational Fields.” American Sociological Review, 48 (1983): 147-60; John W. Meyer and Brian Rowan, “Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony,” American Journal of Sociology, 83 (1977): 340-363; W. Richard Scott and John W. Meyer, “The Organization of Societal Sectors,” in Organizational environments: Rituals and rationality, ed. John W. Meyer and W. Richard Scott, 129-153 (Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 1983); An institution, in its broadest definition, is a rule. It is a social structure that has attained resilience. W. Richard Scott, Institutions and organizations (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 1995); While organizational institutionalists understand institutions to include formal rules that regulate behavior (e.g., public policy), their focus is typically on informal, taken-for-granted cultural-cognitive and normative frameworks. Campbell, Institutional Change.

111. Scott, Institutions and Organizations; Walter W. Powell and Paul J. DiMaggio, “Introduction,” in W. W. Powell and P. J. DiMaggio, ed., The New Institutionalism in Organizational Analysis, 1-38 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).

112. Paul DiMaggio, “Culture and Cognition,” Annual Review of Sociology 23 (1997): 263-287; Royston Greenwood and Roy Suddaby, “Institutional Entrepreneurship in Mature Fields: The Big Five Accounting Firms,” Academy of Management Journal, 49 (2006): 27-48; Patricia H. Thornton and William Ocasio, “Institutional Logics,” in The Sage Handbook of Organizational Institutionalism, ed., Royston Greenwood and others, 99-129 (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2008).

113. Roger Friedland and Robert R. Alford, “Bringing Society Back In: Symbols, Practices, and Institutional Contradictions,” in W. W. Powell and P. J. DiMaggio, ed., The New Institutionalism in Organizational Analysis (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991), 248.

114. Ibid.; Patricia H. Thornton, Markets from Culture: Institutional Logics and Organizational Decisions in Higher Education Publishing (Stanford University Press, 2004).

115. Friedland and Alford, “Bringing Society Back In,” 248.

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116. An organizational field refers to those “organizations that, in the aggregate, constitute a

recognized area of institutional life.” Paul DiMaggio and Walter W. Powell, “The Iron Cage Revisited: Institutional Isomorphism and Collective Rationality in Organizational Fields.” American Sociological Review, 48 (1983): 148.

117. W. Richard Scott. “Conceptualizing organizational fields. Linking organizations and societal systems,” in Systemrationalität und partialinteresse: Festschrift für renate mayntz, ed. H.-U. Derlien, U. Gerhardt and F. W. Scharpf, 203- 221 (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 1994).

118. W. Richard Scott and others, Institutional Change and Healthcare Organizations : From Professional Dominance to Managed Care (University of Chicago Press, 2000); W. Richard Scott, “Competing Logics in Health Care: Professional, State, and Managerial,” in The Sociology of the Economy, ed., Frank Dobbin, 295-315 (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2004).

119. Scott and others, Institutional Change.

120. Patricia H. Thornton and William Ocasio, “Institutional Logics and the Historical Contingency of Power in Organizations: Executive Succession in the Higher Education Publishing Industry, 1958-1990,” American Journal of Sociology, 105 (1999): 801-43; Hayagreeva Rao and others, “Institutional Change in Toque Ville: Nouvelle Cuisine as an Identity Movement in French Gastronomy,” American Journal of Sociology, 108 (2003): 795- 843; Heather Haveman and Hayagreeva Rao, “Structuring a Theory of Moral Sentiments: Institutional and Organizational Coevolution in the Early Thrift Industry,” American Journal of Sociology, 102 (1997): 1606-1651.

121. Thornton and Ocasio, “Institutional Logics.”

122. Paul DiMaggio, “Constructing an Organizational Field as a Professional Project,” in The New Institutionalism in Organizational Analysis, ed. Walter W. Powell and Paul DiMaggio, 267-292 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).

123. Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1990).

124. Steensland, “Cultural Categories”; John D. Skrentny, “Policy-Elite Perceptions and Social Movement Success: Understanding Variations in Group Inclusion in Affirmative Action,” American Journal of Sociology, 111 no. 6 (2006): 1762-1815.

125. Campbell, Institutional Change, 91.

126. Schneider and Ingram, “Social Construction.”

127. Michael B. Katz, The Undeserving Poor: From the War on Poverty to the War on Welfare (New York: Pantheon, 1989).

128. Campbell, Institutional Change.

129. Frederick Wirt and Michael W. Kirst, Political Dynamics of American Education, 3rd Edition. (Berkeley, CA: Mccutchan Publishing Corporation, 2005).

130. Mechanisms are “the processes that account for causal relationships among variables.” Campbell, Institutional Change, 63.

131. See, for example, Kingdon, Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies; Self, American Babylon; Stone, Policy Paradox.

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132. Campbell, Institutional Change, 92.

133. Steensland, Cultural Categories, 1274.

134. Milton Friedman, Capitalism and freedom (University of Chicago Press, 1962).

135. Campbell, Institutional Change, 99.

136. Activists framed nouvelle cuisine in ways that resonated with a broader antiauthoritarian movement (le nouveau roman, la nouvelle critique, le nouveau théâtre, and la nouvelle vague) that emerged following the May 1968 student uprising in France. Rao and others, “Institutional Change in Toque Ville,” 803-804.

137. Kingdon, Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies, 94.

138. Campbell, Institutional Change, 96-98.

139. Skrentny, “Policy-Elite Perceptions.”

140. Holly J. McCammon and others, “Movement Framing and Discursive Opportunity Structures: The Political Successes of the U.S. Women's Jury Movements,” American Sociological Review, 72 (2007): 725-749.

141. Campbell, Institutional Change, 65.

142. Ibid.; Robert K. Yin, Case Study Research: Design and Methods. (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1994); Kathleen M. Eisenhardt, “Building Theories from Case Study Research.” Academy of Management Review 14 (1989): 532-550.

143. For more detailed and extensive discussions of the politics of San Francisco, see Richard DeLeon, “Left Coast City: Progressive Politics in San Francisco, 1975-1991,” (University Press of Kansas, 1992); Frederick M. Wirt, “Power in the City. Decision Making in San Francisco,” (University of California Press, 1974).

144. Bureau of Intergroup Relations, Office of Compensatory Education, Racial and Ethnic Survey of California Public Schools. Part One: Distribution of Pupils, Fall, 1966 (Sacramento: California State Department of Education, 1967), 35-46.

145. In the manner of the Civic Capacity and Urban Education project, Clarence N. Stone, Principal Investigator. For more on the project, see Clarence N. Stone and others, Building Civic Capacity. The Politics of Reforming Urban Schools (University Press of Kansas, 2001.

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PART ONE. Desegregating San Francisco Schools, 1971-1983

Now, changing times and changing conditions have placed a nearly unbearable burden on San Francisco’s schools. In spite of past efforts on the part of those charged with responsibility for the schools, problems have remained unsolved—indeed, some have grown worse. —Wilson Riles, State Superintendent of Public Instruction. February 5, 1975.1

“A Proposal to Redesign the Schools”

On December 29, 1977, after months of preparation, Superintendent Robert F. Alioto

formally announced the final and most significant phase of Educational Redesign, a

comprehensive proposal to overhaul the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD)

student assignment system.2 Under the new plan, one out of every six students would be

assigned to a different school at the start of the new term.3 Redesign was but the latest in

what had been a series of desegregation programs for the city. “At the foundation of the

Redesign framework is the school district’s commitment to integration,” stated Alioto.

“This involves assigning students of diverse racial groups to create multicultural

communities within the schools.”4 The proposal called for the creation of several new

magnet and alternative programs, the closing of under-enrolled schools, and a

reconfiguration of the district’s grade division—structural changes that facilitated a new

conceptualization of desegregation and allowed for a considerable reduction in busing

and an expanded role for parental choice.

As it was in urban locales across the nation, student assignment in the city was

burdened by the complex politics of race and school segregation. Political contention

over the student assignment issue had been part of the political landscape for decades.

With its introduction, Redesign generated a new round of contention that would work its

way from the district central office to the school board chambers, the Federal District

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Court, and the city’s many neighborhoods. Contention reached across racial lines and

involved policy makers, community organizations and their leaders, and everyday

constituents. Redesign would eventually be replaced. And contention would remain a part

of the local landscape for several decades more as entirely new assignment programs

would be developed, implemented, and, just as with Redesign, eventually dismantled. (A

summary of the district’s various student assignment plans is provided in Appendix D.)

Alioto understood very well that widespread support from community leaders,

city officials, and other stakeholders would be important to Redesign’s ultimate success.

Prior to its introduction, school district staff spent several months collecting and

incorporating recommendations from the San Francisco Public Schools Commission, the

citizens’ Planning Committee, the local grand jury tasked with assessing San Francisco

schools, and various community organizations and parent groups.5 In January 1978,

ahead of an authorizing vote from the school board, the district announced seventeen

public hearings that by the end would attract over 3,000 parents, students, teachers, and

community advocates.6 In the days leading up to the first hearing, Isadore “Izzy” Pivnick,

Assistant Superintendent of School Operations, explained what lay ahead. “You’re going

to find some people who are very excited and happy, and some who are very upset—to

the point where they will be emotional and cry. Some will be relieved because their

children can now walk to school. Others will be angry with us because busing meant

better education for their kids, so they want buses back.”7 Pivnick was prescient. From

the first hearing at Horace Mann Junior High to the final hearing on Treasure Island,

district officials and school board members, amid frequent jeers and outbursts, attempted

to sell Redesign to a skeptical public.8 Outnumbered were the many parents, of all races,

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who were supportive of Redesign or at least sympathetic to its goals, with some calling

the proposal progressive and educationally sound.9

The student assignment system Educational Redesign sought to replace was the

result of Johnson v. SFUSD, the lawsuit filed in 1970 by the San Francisco chapter of the

NAACP on behalf of African American elementary school children.10 In ruling that the

district maintained a system of de jure segregated elementary schools, Judge Stanley A.

Weigel noted:

The law is settled that school authorities violate the constitutional rights of

children by establishing school attendance boundary lines knowing that the result

is to continue or increase substantial racial imbalance… by providing for the

construction of new schools or enlargement of existing ones in a manner which

continues or increases substantial racial balance… [and] by assigning black

teachers and teachers of limited experience to “black” schools while assigning

few, if any, such teachers to “white” schools.11

The NAACP, whose members had been frustrated for some time with the district’s

anemic voluntary desegregation efforts, successfully argued that SFUSD did all of this

“persistently and over a period of years” with regard to its elementary schools. The

school district followed the court order to immediately desegregate by devising and

adopting the Horseshoe plan (see Map 13).12 To desegregate schools without “jump

areas” or “crosstown busing,” Horseshoe divided San Francisco into seven contiguous

zones and assigned students within their zones in a way that maintained racial balance

across schools. (The Richmond and Park South complexes developed through

Educational Equality/Quality were maintained in Horseshoe, as Zones I and VII,

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respectively.) In the weeks leading up to the new school term, Mayor Joseph Alioto

publicly attacked Horseshoe and (before backing down) convinced San Franciscans that

they didn’t have to obey the federal court order. “There is an element of governmental

coercion in moving kids against their and their parents’ wishes,” argued the Mayor.

“When the people who don’t want this are blacks and Asians and Chicanos, maybe papa

isn’t always right. Nothing in the Constitution says that you must be integrated by a

certain percentage.”13 Nathaniel Jones, general counsel of the NAACP, charged that

Alioto and others politicians were attempting to do what was done before in the South:

“They confuse the issue, deceive the people and whip up community resentment against

the court. They stood in the school house doors and engaged in demagogic appeals to the

worst instincts of people.”14

On the eve of Horseshoe, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Wilson Riles,

one of the more prominent critics of San Francisco’s desegregation efforts, maintained

that the district had “really dropped the ball” for handing off its responsibility to the

federal district court, which, to Wilson, was ill-equipped to assess the specifics of

desegregation policy. “[The problem of integration] has been boiling in San Francisco for

at least eight years. The attitude was ‘Everything is fine, we don’t have to do anything

and go away and let us alone,’” remarked Riles. “So finally the courts mandated a plan.”

For Wilson, court-mandated busing overlooked the more important issue of affording all

students equal opportunity to high quality educational programs.15 The tension

(perceived, at times) between school integration and school quality would remain in the

decades to follow.

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In 1974, the district instituted some minor modifications to Horseshoe and moved

to voluntarily desegregate its secondary schools through Operation Integrate, a new

student assignment program. Operation Integrate was shepherded by Steven P. Morena, a

former assistant chancellor of the San Francisco Community College District who had

been appointed SFUSD superintendent in 1972, following Shaheen’s departure. This was

a time in which school desegregation created rifts within the school board and between

the board (dominated by anti-busing members) and the superintendents, who were often

perceived to be moving too quickly toward integration. “There was a lot of change in the

Superintendency,” recalled San Francisco Public Schools Commission member Yoritada

Wada. “[The board of education] would fire one, and another one would come on, and he

would stay a while, then they would fire him. So there was a lot of turmoil.”16 By 1975,

Morena had stepped down and the district was once again in need of a leader. The

Investigatory Grand Jury Report on the Board of Education warned: “The resignation of

Steven Morena must give us all pause. Dr. Morena is now the fourth Superintendent to

leave in less than ten years.”17

Following a national search that attracted over ninety candidates, the school board

hired Robert F. Alioto away from the superintendency at Yonkers Public Schools. The

Harvard-educated Alioto arrived in July 1975 expecting to make big changes. Reflecting

back on his time in San Francisco, Alioto stated, “I found a school system that was

replete with incompetency, with racism, with sexism, with cronyism and where education

and children took a second seat and were second class citizens.”18 A 1975 report released

by the San Francisco Public Schools Commission stated: “Although it was not within the

original mandate of the Commission to address the question of integration, we soon

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found that it was closely related to many of the problems we addressed. We became

especially aware of the lack of a strong educational component in [San Francisco’s

desegregation program].”19 By the following year, the board of education had approved

Alioto’s initial phase of Educational Redesign: a ten-point plan to improve the reading

and math skills of elementary children, a gradespan reconfiguration for eleven elementary

schools, and the launching of an open enrollment academic program at Pelton Junior

High School in Bayview-Hunters Point. These preliminary measures laid the groundwork

for the final phase of reforms introduced in late 1977. Alioto would go on to lead San

Francisco for nearly a decade before being forced to resign in 1985. But his legacy was

established early in his tenure with Educational Redesign. “He’d been to Harvard. He’d

been to Yonkers. His whole theory was redesigning things, redoing them… total change,”

recalled Hoover Liddell, a former assistant superintendent under Alioto. “That just

seemed like a philosophy that he’d come with.”20

Educational Redesign, while requiring an estimated $2.9 million outlay, was

projected to save the district $9.6 million over five years from its annual budget of

approximately $167 million, primarily through a combination of school closures and

reduced busing.21 But the seemingly attractive aspects of an expanded “walk enrollment”

and significant fiscal savings did not mean that Redesign would be an easy sell to the

board of education and the general public. Educational Redesign was taken up by the

board on February 14, 1978. Close to one thousand San Franciscans squeezed into the

district’s Nourse Auditorium to listen, criticize, and, in some instances, applaud the board

debate. The proposal would not be adopted until 3:30AM the following morning, after 90

amendments, each with its own roll call vote.22 Pending court approval, Redesign was to

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take effect in time for the 1978-1979 school term. The public had been influential.

Several schools originally slated for closure were ultimately saved. Portions of the busing

plan were abandoned and a few proposed magnet programs remained neighborhood

schools. All of these adjustments resulted from public pressure.23 However, most of what

Educational Redesign originally laid out received board approval. Reflecting on the

difficulty of the process, Alioto remarked, “The important thing about this change is

what’s going to happen in the long run. If nothing else, I think we’ve cracked the barrier

of apathy about education. We’ve generated enthusiasm—or in some cases concern—but

at least the people of San Francisco care. We’re going to see a major educational

reform.”24

The construction and articulation of Educational Redesign pushed against fundamental

understandings of public education and the rights of its beneficiaries. Cultural

characterizations shaped political rhetoric deployed by policy makers and community

advocates, limited the range of policy alternatives that were deemed legitimate, and

guided the course and content of Redesign through their instantiation in existing policy.

Cultural characterizations were structured by three distinct logics of action. An

integration logic was at the forefront. Contention arose as a black-white desegregation

framework slowly gave way to a multiracial one. Second, a neighborhood logic, in which

stakeholders struggled over busing and the potentially segregatory aspects of

neighborhood schools was prominent throughout this period of contention. Third, a

choice logic emerged over time as the concept of parental choice under a desegregation

framework slowly became legitimate. While the SFUSD, with Robert Alioto at its helm,

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worked to implement Educational Redesign, various community organizations and ad

hoc groupings of parents stood opposed to the policy, in part or as a whole. Redesign’s

principal opponent was the SFNAACP, which sued the district and the state of California

to preserve the status quo policy.25 Contention took place over several years during a time

when broader changes in the way society regarded school desegregation were occurring.

The compromise eventually reached satisfied some but angered many, laying a

foundation for future episodes of contention. For the remainder of the chapter, I explain

how cultural characterizations influenced the politics of Educational Redesign through

the three dominant logics of action, integration, neighborhood, and choice.

SFNAACP v. SFUSD

Under the Horseshoe plan, elementary students (kindergarten to sixth grade) were

assigned to a school such that the percentage of students from each of four major racial

subgroups differed by no more than 15 points from that subgroup’s districtwide

percentage.26 Following the elementary grades, students were assigned to junior high

school for grades seven to nine and senior high school for grades ten to twelve without

regard to racial balance. Still under court supervision in the desegregation of its

elementary schools, the district both revised and expanded its student assignment system

in a 1974 program named Operation Integrate. The basic contours established under

Horseshoe were essentially left unchanged. Student assignment was based on balancing

the percentage of students across nine racial and ethnic subgroups (rather than

Horseshoe’s four). And in order to avoid going to trial over segregation at the secondary

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level, Operation Integrate extended the district’s desegregation efforts through grade ten,

with plans to add grades eleven and twelve in subsequent years so that the entire district

would be “racially balanced” by September 1976.27 In contrast to Horseshoe and

Operation Integrate, Educational Redesign proposed an entirely new racial balance

remedy: a school would now need to enroll students from at least four of the nine

recognized racial and ethnic subgroups with no subgroup exceeding 45 percent of the

total student population.28

Three conditions facilitated the district’s ability to redefine racial balance and

institute a new standard for student assignment. First, federal and state desegregation

jurisprudence evolved in ways that disfavored how student assignment was understood,

framed, and constituted under Horseshoe and Operation Integrate. Second, these juridical

changes led to changes in the California regulatory environment for school desegregation.

And third, the changing racial demographics of San Francisco’s student population made

the maintenance of the status quo assignment system increasingly burdensome.

Desegregation Jurisprudence

While the district court’s injunction on SFUSD remained in place throughout much of the

1970s, desegregation jurisprudence evolved. In 1973, the Supreme Court heard Keyes v.

School District No. 1, its first desegregation case originating from outside of the South.29

The Court was asked to consider the Denver School Board’s neighborhood school policy

and its manipulation of school catchment areas and school site selection in ways that

maintained racial and ethnic segregation. Up to this point, the characteristic situation of

unlawful school segregation had been the school district operating a dual system. With

Keyes, the Court clarified the definition of de jure segregation to allow for petitioners to

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bring claims against districts that were not dual, extending the court’s reach in the North

and West. The Court determined that even in situations where a statutory dual system

never existed, a school board’s segregative intent may be cause for legal action. In

delivering the opinion of the Court, Justice Brennan wrote, “We emphasize that the

differentiating factor between de jure and so-called de facto segregation… is purpose or

intent to segregate.”30 Subsequently, the Ninth Circuit construed Keyes to require a

“determination that the school authorities had intentionally discriminated against

minority students by practicing a deliberate policy of racial segregation.” 31 (The case is

Soria v. Oxnard School District Board of Trustees.)

While much of Keyes was viewed favorably by proponents of desegregation, the

clarification the Supreme Court provided in determining de jure and de facto segregation

proved to be a problem for the SFNAACP. Ruling on Johnson two years earlier, Judge

Weigel noted that it was “well settled law” that any school district policy or regulation

that creates or maintains racial imbalance constituted de jure segregation. The distinction

between de facto and de jure was given as such:

If a school board has drawn attendance lines so that there is a reasonable racial

balance among the children attending a given school and if, thereafter, solely due

to movement of the neighborhood population, the school attendance becomes

racially imbalanced, the segregation thus arising is then de facto. On the other

hand, if the school board, as in this case, has drawn school attendance lines, year

after year, knowing that the lines maintain or heighten racial imbalance, the

resulting segregation is de jure.32

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In other words, the question of intent was not relevant. Weigel ruled prior to Soria and

Keyes so this was not an unreasonable legal standard. Indeed, Johnson comported to

numerous cases won by the Justice Department and other petitioners.33 But several

months after the decision, the SFUSD, parents of public school children of Chinese

ancestry, and other opponents filed appeals to Johnson that presented, in part, the

question of whether the correct standard of de jure segregation had been applied.34

The Ninth Circuit waited until after Keyes was decided to issue its ruling since the

appellants’ claim similarly dealt with a district that employed various techniques

resulting in the maintenance of racial segregation. Following Keyes, Weigel’s order was

vacated and returned so that the SFUSD’s segregative intent could be determined. In the

meantime, the school district was ordered by the appellate court to maintain its

desegregation program. Although Horseshoe remained intact, the decision did not bode

well for its ultimate fate. “[Keyes] threw us out of court,” recalled SFNAACP counsel

Arthur Brunwasser. “For the first time the Supreme Court drew the line between school

districts that were de facto segregated by law and the de jure [districts segregated] by

practice.”35

State Regulatory Environment

Throughout much of the 1960s, a majority of members on the California State Board of

Education (SBE) proactively supported desegregation efforts undertaken by local

education authorities.36 In 1962, the SBE declared that racial and ethnic segregation in

schools stood against equality of educational opportunity and that “all effort to avoid and

eliminate segregation” should be put forth by districts.37 The following year, the SBE

required districts to consider the potential impact of school boundaries and attendance

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practices on racial integration.38 These policies would soon become a legal obligation

imposed by the state Supreme Court in response to a school desegregation lawsuit

originating from Pasadena.39 In 1966, the SBE instituted an annual racial and ethnic

census in order to track desegregation efforts across the state.40 (This came two years

after SFUSD conducted its first census under pressure from local activists.) And in 1969,

after months of discussion, the SBE affirmed and elaborated its earlier position on the

elimination of segregation by defining a racially imbalanced school as one in which “the

percentage of pupils of one or more racial or ethnic groups differs by more than fifteen

percentage points from that in all the schools of the district.”41 The definition was

unanimously approved and, at the time, was “one of the most precise definitions of racial

imbalance in the nation.”42 This was the standard adopted by San Francisco Unified for

its Horseshoe plan.

As with desegregation jurisprudence, California’s regulatory environment evolved

over the years. Controversy arose in districts up and down the state over the busing of

students for the purpose of desegregation. While busing was seen by proponents as a

practical solution to racial imbalance, it was opposed by many parents, even among those

who supported the idea of integrated schools. In response to growing opposition, the SBE

repealed its racial balance definition in 1970.43 After a failed attempt by the California

Legislature to add an anti-busing provision to the Education Code,44 an initiative statute

to prevent districts from using race as a factor in student assignment and repeal state

guidelines for school integration was placed on the November 1972 ballot (Proposition

21). The electorate overwhelmingly voted for the measure.45 While the California

Supreme Court ultimately declared the section on student assignment unconstitutional,

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provisions that eliminated state integration guidelines were allowed to remain.46 During

this period, several school desegregation cases were working their way through the state

court system. On June 28, 1976, the California Supreme Court handed down sweeping

guidelines after considering cases from Los Angeles and San Bernardino. The court held

that districts were bound by the state Constitution to take steps to “alleviate the racial and

ethnic isolation” of students, whether the origin of isolation was de jure or de facto in

nature.47 San Francisco Unified interpreted the decision to mean that litigating the issue

of segregative intent was no longer necessary. Either way, the district was responsible for

reducing segregation.48 In addition, the state supreme court broke from the trial court’s

original approach by noting that neither segregation nor desegregation could be

determined strictly on the basis of a school’s racial combination: “other factors, such as

the racial composition of faculty and administration, and community and school board

attitudes toward the school, have a place in such a determination.”49 In other words, there

would be no definition of racial segregation that would, for example, declare a school

segregated solely if it was more than 50 percent white.

In turn, the state board promulgated new regulations directing school districts to

take “reasonable and feasible steps to alleviate” racial and ethnic segregation, mirroring

the language of the Court’s opinion. The SBE put forth a revised definition of segregated

schools: “Those schools in which the minority student enrollment is so disproportionate

as realistically to isolate minority students from other students and thus deprive minority

students of an integrated educational experience.” Districts with segregated schools were

required to work with community representatives to develop and adopt a plan of action

by January 1, 1979 and every four years thereafter.50 The new regulations compelling

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districts to alleviate segregation were but a softer version of the earlier regulations

requiring districts to eliminate racial and ethnic imbalance. While Horseshoe

appropriately conformed to the legal and regulatory environment of the early 1970s, it no

longer did so by the late 1970s. Educational Redesign, however, was attuned to the

state’s relatively weak guidance on school segregation and its disfavor of a numerical

definition of racial imbalance.

Racial and Ethnic Demographics

During the summer of 1975, James Coleman, who nearly a decade earlier rose to

prominence by authoring a report documenting the impact of school segregation, once

again gained national attention, this time for several comments he made on the

relationship between school desegregation and demographic change. Coleman expressed

concern that busing, rezoning, and other “induced integration” strategies led white

families to remove their children from urban public school systems, resulting in

resegregation.51 He concluded, provocatively, that the courts were “probably the worst

instrument of social policy” for consequential issues such as school desegregation where

individuals can act in ways that ultimately defeat intended policy goals. Because of

Coleman’s professional stature as a social scientist, his statements were taken as an

authoritative explanation for white flight, a phenomenon widely observed since busing

became a common remedy to address housing segregation.52

Addressing those who predicted the departure of white students following San

Francisco’s 1971 desegregation mandate, Judge Weigel wrote, “By feeding unwarranted

fears about busing, those opposing desegregation invite a white flight even before

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children and parents have had a reasonable opportunity to see for themselves how busing

works in actual practice. The testimony in this case makes it clear that in those

communities in which busing has been employed, it has worked well. There was no

evidence to the contrary.”53 Despite Weigel’s attempt to allay concern, San Francisco

Unified was no different than any of the other large urban school districts across the

nation experiencing significant enrollment declines among white students.

While the number of white public school students in the city had fallen steadily

for several years, the steepest drop occurred immediately following the implementation

of the Horseshoe plan. Between 1968 and 1976, San Francisco’s public schools lost a

total 21,040 white students, representing a 56.9 percent drop in enrollment. For the 1970-

1971 school year, just prior Horseshoe, the district enrolled 29,048 white students, for the

following term, white enrollment in the district dropped to 25,808. It was not just white

students leaving the public schools of San Francisco. Chinese students also opted out in

significant numbers. In the school year prior to Horseshoe, San Francisco enrolled 12,248

Chinese students. The following term, Chinese enrollment dropped by 1,003.54 Students

were encouraged to enroll in “Freedom Schools” established by the San Francisco

Chinese Committee for Quality Education, an ad hoc organization of Chinatown parents

and leaders.55 In the years leading up to Educational Redesign, the district reported a nine

percent drop in student enrollment, mostly due to the loss of white and Chinese

students.56 But at the same time students were leaving the school district, San Francisco

was welcoming an influx of new immigrant families. The 1965 Immigration and

Nationality Act (INA) led to an increase in students from Mexico, the Philippines, China,

Vietnam, and elsewhere. Schools were overwhelmingly white as late as the 1940s. By the

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1960s, the district was comprised of primarily white and black students. And although

San Francisco had been home to several Asian and Latino communities for generations,

the demographic changes the district witnessed following INA were considerable (see

Table 2).57

The rapid demographic change and the declining student enrollment taking place

in San Francisco became one of the more prominent indicators the district used to justify

the implementation of a new school assignment plan.58 “In reviewing the shifting

racial/ethnic balance, I found that the pupil population had shifted from a two-thirds

white and black mix in 1969 to one which was nearly one half Asian and Latino,” stated

Alioto. “Demographic projections for the near future show a further decline in white and

black public school populations”59 These changes made a revision to the framework of

student assignment—from a focus on the ratio of white to black students to a new

emphasis on broader racial diversity—seem sensible.

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Table 2. SFUSD student population by subgroup (percent), 1965-1978

School Year TOTAL L OW AA C J K AI F ONW

1965-66 93,269 11.5 45.3 25.6 13.3 1.8 - - 2.5 -

1966-67 93,045 12.3 44.0 26.1 13.6 1.8 - - 2.3 -

1967-68 93,710 12.9 41.0 26.5 13.5 1.8 0.1 0.2 2.3 1.6

1968-69 92,653 13.1 39.9 27.1 13.6 1.8 0.1 0.2 2.6 1.6

1969-70 90,790 13.7 37.0 27.6 14.6 1.7 0.2 0.3 3.2 1.7

1970-71 82,757 13.6 35.1 28.1 14.8 1.8 0.3 0.3 4.1 1.9

1971-72 80,902 13.8 31.9 30.0 13.9 1.8 0.3 0.3 5.9 2.2

1972-73 79,042 14.0 29.6 30.1 15.0 1.8 0.4 0.3 6.4 2.5

1973-74 74,723 14.3 27.0 30.1 16.0 1.7 0.5 0.3 7.4 2.7

1974-75 72,443 14.5 25.3 29.8 16.4 1.8 0.6 0.4 8.2 3.0

1975-76 70,045 13.8 24.4 29.8 16.8 1.3 0.8 0.4 8.3 4.1

1976-77 67,778 13.9 23.5 29.0 17.4 1.5 0.9 0.4 8.7 4.6

1977-78 63,872 14.3 22.1 28.6 18.1 1.5 1.0 0.6 8.8 5.0

Source: Research, Planning, and Accountability Department, San Francisco Unified School District.

N.B. The nine subgroups recognized by the district during this period: (L)atino, (O)ther (W)hite, (A)frican (A)merican, (C)hinese, (J)apanese, (K)orean, (A)merican (I)ndian, (F)ilipino, (O)ther (N)on-(W)hite. Note the decline in total enrollment, the decline in the percentage of white (OW) students, and the increase in the percentage of Latino (L) and Chinese (C) students.

Trouble on the Horizon

On April 17, 1978, a few months after the board of education gave its approval, the

district sought authorization from the Federal District Court to implement Educational

Redesign. (Authorization was necessary because the desegregation mandate established

in Johnson v. SFUSD remained in effect.) Alioto declared, “[C]ontrary to the Horseshoe

plan, which has failed to achieve its goal of a desegregated quality education for all San

Francisco students, I am convinced that implementation of the Educational Redesign will

achieve that desegregated quality education to which I and the Board are committed.” 60

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The district’s request that the Court allow the dismantlement of Operation

Integrate (with Horseshoe as its centerpiece) in favor of Redesign quickly became a

matter of grave concern to the San Francisco chapter of the NAACP. Several years

earlier, soon after the 1974 Appeals Court remand of Johnson, attorneys from both sides

discussed resolving the case through a consent decree whereby the recitals would indicate

that the board of education “did not acknowledge violating the law and did not admit any

wrong doing.” A consent decree was compelling to all involved since it would allow for a

judgment (which the SFNAACP deemed necessary in order to hold the district

accountable) without the contention that a full-scale evidentiary hearing would bring. By

November 1975, the SFNAACP had authorized their attorney, Arthur Brunwasser, to

proceed with the settlement plan. But the following March, its membership reversed

course, voting to rescind all prior settlement agreements with the district and to instead

prepare for a trial.61

This was a risky strategy. Due to Keyes, unlike the original trial, the SFNAACP

would now need to prove segregatory intent on the part of the school district. “In my

view, there is insufficient evidence, either in the record or outside of it, to establish acts

of de jure segregation on the part of the School District, and there does not appear to be

any legal means available to prevent the implementation of the Superintendent’s proposal

[i.e., Redesign],” wrote Brunwasser in a letter to SFNAACP branch president Joe Hall.

“When the School District formally requests Judge Weigel to approve the new proposal, I

feel certain that one of the defendants will make a motion to dismiss the case, and such a

motion will very likely be successful.”62

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Because no formal action had been taken by either party following the 1974

remand and because the facts and law had changed since the original 1971 decision,

Weigel dismissed Johnson on June 22, 1978 without prejudice, for failure to prosecute

and mootness. Following the dismissal, the SFNAACP substituted Brunwasser, who

continued to favor a settlement, for Thomas I. Atkins, a well-known desegregation

attorney who was Special Counsel to the NAACP Special Contribution Fund.63

Reflecting on the strategy differences he had with the SFNAACP, Brunwasser stated,

“With the standards of Keyes… we weren’t going to win [at trial]. In fact, after Keyes

was decided, I knew that we were going to get a reversal in the Ninth Circuit, and I tried

to settle that case.”64

Atkins was of a different opinion. Sensing that it was premature to discuss a

settlement and fearing that Redesign would lead to resegregation, he counseled the

SFNAACP to move forward with a trial and validate the Court’s original 1971 decision.

“[The decision] must be defended against any efforts to dilute its vitality or the integrity

of the desegregation order which it effected in the fall of 1971,” argued Atkins. “As a

practical matter, this means the Plaintiffs must be willing and prepared to go back into

Court in a remand trial and produce such supplemental evidence as is necessary to

indicate to the Court of Appeals that the original finding of de jure segregation was

required by the facts.”65

On June 30, 1978, with Atkins as lead counsel, the SFNAACP filed a new lawsuit

on behalf of all black children attending public schools in San Francisco (the case is

SFNAACP v. SFUSD).66 The new lawsuit, as filed, differed from Johnson in two

important ways. Unlike Johnson, which focused on elementary students, SFNAACP

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sought relief for both elementary and secondary students. In addition, the new lawsuit

was filed against both local defendants (the school board, the superintendent, and the

school district) and state defendants (the state board of education, the superintendent of

public instruction, and the California Department of Education), whereas Johnson

involved only local defendants. (As I describe below, a third important distinction would

come in early 1979 when the SFNAACP’s class certification would be modified.)

Demanding that black students not be “subjected to any of the badges or indicia of

slavery,” the SFNAACP requested a temporary restraining order and preliminary

injunction requiring the district to maintain the Horseshoe plan. “Our immediate concern

is the headlong rush of this district to dismantle segregation and to resegregate schools,”

remarked Benjamin L. Hooks, national director of the NAACP. “We want the schools to

do their job, which is to educate children so that when they graduate they can go to

college if they want to, or so they can get a good job if they want to go to work.”67

Racial Balance Redefined

Under Horseshoe, the SFUSD required parents to declare on behalf of their children the

most appropriate of six racial subgroups. Each subgroup belonged to one of two main

racial categories tracked by the district, White or Nonwhite. The subgroups Other White

and Spanish Surname fell under the district’s White category, and the subgroups

Negro/Black, American Indian, Asian/Oriental, and Other Nonwhite belonged to the

district’s Nonwhite category. The Asian/Oriental subgroup brought together Chinese,

Japanese, and Korean students, and the Other Nonwhite subgroup was mostly comprised

of Filipinos and other less populous Asian and Pacific Islander populations.68

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Despite the existence of six subgroups, the specific relief sought and provided for

in Johnson was narrow. Even in a city as racially diverse as San Francisco, desegregation

had widely been understood to be principally about balancing the racial percentage of

white and black students in schools. The Court defined school segregation as situations in

which “the ratio of whites to blacks… is substantially at variance with the ratio of white

children to black children in the total population of the schools.”69 In line with this

definition, the stated objective of the district’s Horseshoe plan was the “full integration of

all public elementary schools so that the ratio of black children to white children will then

be and thereafter continue to be substantially the same in each school.”70 To accomplish

Horseshoe’s objective, the district adopted the standard provided by the SBE whereby the

segregation threshold for a school’s subgroup enrollment was plus or minus fifteen

percentage points of that subgroup’s districtwide population. Horseshoe’s seven

attendance zones were drawn by district officials in such a way that would allow the

district to “maintain an excess of whites to blacks” within the fifteen percentage point

standard.71

In spite of the Court’s narrow focus, the district needed the involvement of all

students. So in addition to applying the SBE guidelines to white and black children, the

district “committed itself… to extending these guidelines to the third and fourth major

groups in the enrollment,” Latinos and Asians.72 “Our case was brought for black kids, a

class action… so, it was their rights that were primarily involved,” observed SFNAACP

attorney Arthur Brunwasser. “However, as a matter of educational policy… it came about

that… because of the unique racial makeup of San Francisco, that all racial groups would

be involved in the program”73 On this point the Court wrote, “While plaintiffs complain

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only of segregation of black students, the plan they have filed, as well as that filed by

defendants, provides for a balancing of all races. The fact that the Court did not require

more than desegregation of black students does not make the plans invalid. And there are

solid reasons supporting the parties in their plans for desegregation of all races.”74

Nevertheless, while Horseshoe attempted to desegregate the four largest

subgroups, its principal concern was black and white students. In its initial year, the

Other White and Negro/Black subgroups had districtwide percentages of elementary

students substantially greater than fifteen percent. But only 14.4 percent of elementary

students were identified as Asian/Oriental and only 13.4 percent of elementary students

were identified as Spanish Surname. Thus, while a cap was placed on schools for the

third and fourth largest subgroups (enrollments of no more than 29.4 percent Asian and

28.4 percent Latino students were allowed), the standard Horseshoe applied meant that

there was no lower limit for these two subgroups. A school could have no Latino or

Asian students and still be considered racially balanced. In contrast, each and every

school in the district had to both enroll significant numbers of black and white students

and ensure that neither group constituted a majority: in order to be considered racially

balanced and in compliance with the Court’s mandate, schools would need to enroll at

least 19.8 percent but no more than 49.8 percent white students and at least 13.8 percent

but no more than 43.9 percent black students (See Table 3).

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Table 3. Elementary school level racial balance with ±15 percent standard, 1971

Districtwide Percent Minimum Maximum

Spanish Surname 13.4 - 28.4 Other White 34.8 19.8 49.8 Negro/Black 28.9 13.9 43.9 Asian 14.4 - 29.4 Other Non White 8.5 - 23.5

Source. “Current Statistics and Evaluation” July 1, 1971. SFUSD. NARA. Racial and Ethnic subgroup labels c1971. Figures do not include students in special education programs.

N.B. Asian category included Chinese (12.3), Japanese (1.8), and Korean (0.3) subgroups; Other Non White category included Filipino (6.0), American Indian (0.4), Other Non-White (1.8), and an Unknown category (0.3). The racial and ethnic subgroup categories established by the State Board of Education: Spanish Surname, Other White, Negro, Oriental, American Indian, and Other Non-White (Procedures to Correct Racial and Ethnic Imbalance in School Districts. California State Department of Education, 1969)

To facilitate the district’s school-level racial balancing efforts, Horseshoe’s attendance

zones were drawn so that each contained roughly one-seventh of the districtwide

population of black and white students: zones had between a 10.6 percent and a 25.9

percent share of the districtwide total. This was a relatively narrow band considering that

for Latino students, zones ranged from a low of 2.1 percent to a high of 38.0 percent of

the subgroup’s districtwide total, and for Asian students, zones ranged from 5.0 percent

to 35.9 percent of the districtwide total (see Table 4). The demographic makeup of

Horseshoe’s attendance zones similarly suggest attention toward white and black

students. Within each zone, white students comprised between 23.0 percent and 44.8

percent of the student population. Likewise, for each zone, black students comprised

between 18.0 percent and 38.5 percent of the student population. But due to the racial

demographics and housing patterns of the district, as well as the need to make attendance

zones of contiguous area, three zones contained fewer than four percent Latino students

and two zones had less than five percent Asian students (see Table 5).

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Table 4. Share of districtwide subgroup population (percent), c1971

Horseshoe Zone Latino White Black Asian 1. Richmond Complex (5,741 students) 2.4 13.7 11.3 22.9 2. Marina, Chinatown, Western Addition (4,836 students) 2.1 11.7 10.6 17.0 3. Mission, Chinatown, Potrero Hill (9,456 students) 38.0 13.4 12.7 35.9 4. Glen Park, Hunters Point (7,092 students) 24.8 15.2 15.7 5.1 5. West of Twin Peaks, Visitacion Valley, Bayview (10,010 students) 23.6 22.6 25.9 7.1 6. Sunset, Oceanview (4,443 students) 2.7 12.3 12.8 5.0 7. Park South Complex (4,590 students) 6.3 11.0 11.0 6.9

Source. Current Statistics and Evaluation—Horseshoe, July 1, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD, RG21, NARA.

N.B. Population totals includes “Other Non White” students.

Table 5. Racial percentages by Horseshoe Zone, c1971

Horseshoe Zone Latino White Black Asian

1. Richmond Complex (5,741 students) 2.6 38.5 26.4 26.4

2. Marina, Chinatown, Western Addition (4,836 students) 2.7 39.3 29.2 23.3

3. Mission, Chinatown, Potrero Hill (9,456 students) 24.9 23.0 18.0 25.1

4. Glen Park, Hunters Point (7,092 students) 21.7 34.7 29.6 4.8

5. West of Twin Peaks, Visitacion Valley, Bayview (10,010 students) 14.6 36.6 34.5 4.7

6. Sunset, Oceanview (4,443 students) 3.8 44.8 38.5 7.4

7. Park South Complex (4,590 students) 8.5 38.6 31.9 10.0

Districtwide (46,168 students) 13.4 34.8 28.9 14.4

Source. Current Statistics and Evaluation—Horseshoe, July 1, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD, RG21, NARA

N.B. Population totals includes “Other Non White” students. Note the distribution of Latino and Asian students in comparison with the distribution of white and black students.

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With the 1974 implementation of Operation Integrate, SFUSD, in addition to extending

desegregation to secondary schools, expanded the fifteen percent criterion to nine

subgroups by disaggregating the Asian category. The recognized racial and ethnic

subgroups were now: Spanish Surname, Other White, Negro/Black, Chinese, Japanese,

Korean, American Indian, Filipino, and Other Non-White. During this period, the

proportion of public school students that were Chinese gradually increased such that by

1977, schools would need a student enrollment of at least 3.1 percent Chinese to be in

compliance with Operation Integrate (see Table 6).

Table 6. School level racial balance with ±15 percent standard, 1977

Districtwide Percent Minimum Maximum

Spanish Surname 14.3 - 29.3 Other White 22.1 7.1 37.1 Negro/Black 28.6 13.6 43.6 Chinese 18.1 3.1 33.1 Japanese 1.5 - 16.5 Korean 1.0 - 16.0 American Indian 0.6 - 15.6 Filipino 8.8 - 23.8 Other Non White 5.0 - 20.0

Source. Research, Planning, and Accountability Department, San Francisco Unified School District.

N.B. Racial and Ethnic subgroup labels c1977. Eventually, the demographic changes in the city, particularly the growth of the Chinese

community, would be an important factor challenging the bipolar conceptualization of

school desegregation. But at the time, even with the expansion to nine subgroups, the

black/white framework was durable. A 1976 evaluation report by the SFUSD Integration

Department found that district officials “tacitly admitted” the difficulty of integrating the

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comparatively small and geographically concentrated Chinese and Latino populations by

drawing the boundaries it did for zone three.75 The zone combined the Mission (where

many Latino students lived) and Chinatown districts. Schools in zone three were out of

balance almost from the very start of Horseshoe, and with the growth of language

programs for Spanish and Chinese speaking students, it was only a matter of a few years

that approximately one half of the out-of-balance schools in the district were located in

the zone. “Thus, the desegregation plan may be said to have been aimed at equalizing the

proportions of Black and White students in the schools,” continued the evaluation. “This

was very largely achieved in the early years of the plan, both according to the state

guidelines and when measured by the number of highly segregated Black or White

schools, which was reduced to zero.”76

The core function of first Horseshoe and then Operation Integrate was narrow.

The policy function of these student assignment schemes was to ensure that a roughly

equivalent ratio of whites to blacks existed in every zone and every school. Latino and

Asian students were but incidentally assigned. This “bipolar” conceptualization for

desegregation was instantiated in the district’s student assignment policies and became

the way desegregation was framed and understood. By contrast, Educational Redesign

was an early foray into a multipolar conceptualization of desegregation, one that favored

flexibility over fixed ratios. Redesign redefined a racially balanced school as one in

which “no ethnic or racial group… constitute[s] a majority” in student enrollment.77 To

comply with the new definition, Redesign imposed a new standard requiring schools to

enroll at least four of the nine recognized racial and ethnic subgroups and to prevent any

subgroup from exceeding 45 percent of the total student population (see Table 7).78 This

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was a subtle but significant break from the status quo. With the implementation of

Redesign, San Francisco’s student assignment scheme no longer set minimum subgroup

percentages and it created a standard maximum subgroup percentage, regardless of

district demographics. Unlike prior assignment programs, schools could be in compliance

with very few or even no black or white students. And students from minor subgroups,

Filipinos, for example, could be amassed in a school up to the 45 percent limit.

Table 7. Racial balance in SFUSD school assignment plans

Student Assignment Definition of Racial Balance Standard Applied

Horseshoe (1971); Operation Integrate (1974)

In every school, ratio of white to black students not substantially at variance with districtwide ratio.

In every school, each recognized subgroup falls within 15 percentage points of their districtwide total.

Educational Redesign (1978)

In every school, no racial or ethnic subgroup constitutes a majority.

In every school, at least four subgroups represented with no subgroup constituting more than 45 percent of student population.

“The sad history of educational neglect”

The SFUSD argued that changes proposed by Educational Redesign conformed to current

state regulations and contemporary desegregation jurisprudence.79 However, critics

argued that Redesign was not true integration.80 The SFNAACP argued that the

consequence of changing the definition of racial balance was the immediate resegregation

of schools for reasons unrelated to any possible “educational needs of a racially-neutral

nature.”81 Redesign “denied Black children their constitutional right to a desegregated

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and equal educational opportunity,” complained Joseph Hall. “It was merely a part of the

sad history of the educational neglect of Black children within the SFUSD.”82 The

SFNAACP favored the original standard of racial identifiability put in place by the State

Board of Education: when, for a school, the “student racial population for any one group

is ±15 percent of that group’s percentage of the systemwide total student population.”83

Although these provisions had since been repealed in California, similar standards were

sanctioned elsewhere, and to bolster its case, the SFNAACP pointed to a recent Appellate

Court opinion allowing a desegregation plan for Columbus, Ohio in which the percentage

of black students in any given school was to fall within a minimum-maximum range

based on the districtwide percentage of blacks, just as in Horseshoe.84

The SFNAACP lawsuit came on the heels of the landslide victory of Proposition

13, a ballot initiative limiting property tax receipts.85 Since property taxes were a core

source of school funding, Prop. 13 had the effect of eliminating more than half of local

school revenue statewide, obliging the California legislature to provide a backfill to

school districts through the state general fund.86 Prop. 13’s impact was considerable. In

San Francisco, the share of state and local revenue for the district flipped following its

passage (see Figure 3). And even with increased support from the state, Prop. 13 left the

district with a budget shortfall. During the spring of 1978, the SFUSD’s projected

expenses for the upcoming school year was $186 million.87 Following the passage of

Prop. 13, the district was forced to reduce its budget to $167.4 million, necessitating the

closure of thirteen elementary schools and twenty one children centers and the laying off

of 859 employees (Table 8).88 Amidst talk that school funding in the city would be

slashed, Benjamin Hooks forcefully stated that the court must “enjoin state school

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officials from taking away money from children who have already been denied

educational opportunities.”89 Accordingly, a motion was included in the SFNAACP

lawsuit seeking to prevent the implementation of Prop. 13 in San Francisco.

Figure 3. State and local revenue share for SFUSD (percent).

Source: 1978-1979 Civil Grand Jury Reports.

1977-1978 School Year 1978-1979 School Year

Table 8. SFSUD School budget before and after Prop. 13 (in millions)

Category 1977-1978 1978-1979 Basic Instruction $55.1 $51.5 Education for handicapped students 8.3 9.1 Summer School 2.2 0.3 Bilingual Ed 6.2 8.0 After school recreation 0.7 - Children’s Centers 15.2 12.8 Administrative Payroll 7.8 5.6 Teachers Payroll 89.6 83.8 Books, Supplies, Equipment 9.9 8.7 Free Community Use of School Buildings 2.8 - Enrollment 65,347 61,112

Source: San Francisco Chronicle, “Slimmer Schools Budget,” August 12, 1978.

Over the summer, Judge Weigel ruled against a request by the SFNAACP to continue

Horseshoe while parties prepared for trial. So in the fall of 1978, amidst austere budget

0.29

0.71 0.69

0.31

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cuts, the district implemented Educational Redesign. The following year, new presiding

judge William H. Orrick,90 in a ruling that would later be criticized by many community

groups and leaders, expanded the plaintiff class. Orrick certified the SFNAACP as class

representative of not just all black public school children—as their lawsuit originally

asserted—but of “all the school children, heretofore, now or hereafter eligible to attend

the public elementary and secondary schools of the SFUSD.”91 Over the next several

years, amidst various minor legal machinations, three pre-trial motions were submitted

that became significant to the eventual outcome of the case.92 First, the state defendants

filed a motion for dismissal or abstention, arguing that their presence was unnecessary to

resolve the case since the primary responsibility for the establishment and

implementation of education policy lay with the state legislature and local school

districts.93 The Court denied the motion. Keeping the state defendants on for the entirety

of the case facilitated the acquisition of post-settlement funding from the state supporting

the city’s desegregation activities. Second, the local defendants filed a motion for a

separate trial to resolve the question of whether the district was in fact operating a dual

school system in violation of plaintiffs’ constitutional rights. The defendants argued that

if, with the implementation of Educational Redesign, all vestiges of segregation had been

eliminated, there would be no basis for additional relief.94 The Court denied this motion

as well but asked that the issue of current conditions of segregation be the very first issue

addressed at a trial.95

Third, while the local defendants’ motion for a separate trial was pending, the

SFNAACP requested a partial summary judgment on the issue of whether the school

district was racially segregated as of 1954 or at any point thereafter.96 Plaintiffs described

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a long history of de jure school segregation in San Francisco, from the establishment of

“Colored” and Chinese schools during the 1850s to discriminatory hiring and segregative

assignment of teachers a century later.97 The motion was denied as the SFNAACP “failed

to assert a sufficient number of undisputed facts to create an inference of segregative

intent.”98 It did, however, set the stage for a settlement. Judge Orrick’s comments on the

motion addressing the strengths and factual deficiencies of the SFNAACP’s case

provided parameters for the parties to negotiate within, and on December 30, 1982, hours

before the Court’s trial deadline, the SFNAACP and the school district preliminarily

entered into a consent decree settlement over the appropriate means to desegregate the

schools.99 The consent decree adopted the basic elements of Redesign. Its goal was: “to

eliminate racial/ethnic segregation or identifiability in any SFUSD school, program, or

classroom and to achieve the broadest practicable distribution throughout the system of

students from the racial and ethnic groups which comprise the student enrollment of the

SFUSD.”100 Schools were required to enroll students from at least four of the nine

recognized racial and ethnic subgroups. For most schools, no subgroup could exceed 45

percent of the student body. For a number of alternative schools, particular subgroups

could not have an enrollment comprising more than 40 percent of the student body.

(These are referred to as the “Paragraph 13 Requirements” after their location in the

consent decree document). The consent decree also included provisions for programs that

would enhance school quality, particularly in the predominantly African American

Bayshore district.

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Crosstown Busing

Throughout the 1970s, student assignment was often understood and debated as a choice

between two alternatives: walking to a neighborhood school or being bused to a non-

neighborhood school for the purpose of desegregation. When framed in this way, most

parents favored a neighborhood system, even if (or in some cases, because) it meant a

continuation of school segregation. Even during the early days of Horseshoe, when

deleterious effects of segregated schools on black children were widely discussed and

commonly accepted, busing as a policy solution faced opposition. Proposition H, a June

1970 San Francisco policy declaration measure asking, “Shall elementary school children

be bused without parental consent?” received 131,00 “No” answers and only 39,000

“Yes” answers.101 Although a majority of African Americans and Latinos in San

Francisco believed, in a general sense, that children benefit from racially balanced

schools, a majority of whites and Chinese Americans felt the opposite (see Table 9,

Question 1).102 And when it came to the specific busing plans prescribed by Horseshoe,

most San Franciscans—across all four major racial subgroups—were opposed; fewer

than 40 percent of black and Latino, less than 20 percent of white, and only 6 percent of

Chinese respondents expressed approval of the plan (see Table 9, Questions 3 & 4).

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Table 9. What San Francisco thinks about busing

White Black Latino Chinese

1. Our children will benefit from the experiences of racially balanced schools.

0.38 0.64 0.59 0.28

2. Our children will not benefit from the experiences of racially balanced schools.

0.51 0.24 0.21 0.54

3. Approve of the plan for busing children to school in order to achieve racial balance in San Francisco.

0.14 0.39 0.38 0.06

4. Disapprove of the plan for busing children to school in order to achieve racial balance in San Francisco.

0.83 0.56 0.59 0.92

5. I feel the school my child attends should reflect the racial characteristics of our neighborhood.

0.60 0.37 0.50 0.58

6. I do not feel the school my child attends should reflect the racial characteristics of our neighborhood.

0.33 0.50 0.36 0.27

7. I feel my child might get a better education at a school not in our neighborhood.

0.13 0.46 0.29 0.02

8. I do not feel my child might get a better education at a school not in our neighborhood.

0.73 0.43 0.57 0.67

9. Believe racial balance by busing will raise the standard of education.

0.07 0.38 0.20 0.02

10. Believe racial balance by busing will lower the standard of education.

0.43 0.12 0.31 0.44

11. Believe racial balance by busing will not make a difference in the standard of education.

0.44 0.40 0.35 0.35

Source: “What San Francisco thinks about busing” San Francisco Examiner, August 29, 1971. The poll was carried out for the Examiner by Multi-Media Research Company.

N.B. Actual racial categories were white, Negro, Latin American, and Chinese. Busing had its detractors among policy elites as well. In advance of Horseshoe, busing

opponents placed a charter amendment on the ballot that sought to transform the mayor-

appointed board of education into a board elected by voters. It was thought that a board

determined by the electorate would more vigorously oppose the desegregation of San

Francisco schools and disrupt the efforts of Superintendent Thomas Shaheen, someone

who was seen as leading the effort to integrate the school system.103 (Jenkins announced

retirement near the end of the 1969-1970 term. Shaheen began his term in the fall of

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1970, serving for two years before being forced out by the school board.)104 The ballot

measure overwhelmingly passed and as board members’ terms expired, they were

replaced by new members who were elected. When Superintendent Alioto was appointed

in 1975, he had to contend with the first school board fully composed of elected

members, a majority of whom were elected on an anti-busing platform.105

The dilemma SFUSD faced was that desegregation required busing. “The

evidence demonstrates that there simply cannot be desegregation without some busing of

some students because there are districts in the city in which there are great

preponderances of members of one particular race,” wrote Judge Weigel in his 1971

desegregation decree. “This is not to say that busing is a desirable end in itself. It is

not.”106 The apprehension among San Franciscans and the sharp decline in white and

Chinese student enrollment following Weigel’s decree suggested as much. What was

desirable was the traditional neighborhood method of school assignment.

Similar to districts throughout the country, the San Francisco Board of Education

operated under a neighborhood school policy prior to desegregation. In place since 1936,

the policy (“which in principle still governs present practice,” stated former

Superintendent Spears) determined student assignment based on school catchment zones

of contiguous area:

Pupils in elementary schools shall be enrolled in the schools which are nearest or

most convenient to their homes. Pupils shall be permitted to enroll in any

secondary school in the city if accommodations permit. If the number enrolled in

any secondary school exceeds the number that can be accommodated, preference

must be given to those pupils who reside nearest the school.107

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“[T]he neighborhood school plan is generally accepted by the community as the most

desirable method of assigning pupils to schools, especially elementary and junior high

schools,” determined a school board committee formed in 1962 to study school

segregation.108 That year, the district was successful at stalling community based

demands to desegregate by arguing that its neighborhood system complied with state

guidance requiring only that boundaries be drawn such that all students had equivalent

convenience, facilities, and opportunities.109 (Busing as a means of transporting students

was not an entirely foreign concept prior to Horseshoe. Following a postwar student

enrollment surge, the district bused children as a means of alleviating overcrowded

conditions, primarily by transporting black children to predominantly white schools.110 It

was the busing of students out of their neighborhood for the purpose of desegregation—

particularly busing students into predominantly black schools—that troubled many.)

A neighborhood logic persisted throughout the desegregation debates of the early

1970s. In settling the Johnson lawsuit, all of the plans considered, including Horseshoe,

incorporated a zone system to “retain a feeling of a neighborhood.”111 The Citizens

Advisory Committee, charged with developing the district’s desegregation plan, wrote to

the public: “It would be an easy job to desegregate all the schools with a computer and

thus have cross-town busing, children going to several elementary schools and the pairing

of schools without regard to the needs of those children.”112 Such a system could more

comprehensively integrate the district. Instead, under Horseshoe, children living on the

same square block and in the same grade attended the same school, just as in a

neighborhood system. In proposing an alternative plan to the school district’s, the

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SFNAACP’s Charles Belle dismissed Horseshoe as “just an extension of the

neighborhood school concept.”113

In its efforts to block Educational Redesign’s implementation, the SFNAACP

argued that “the defendants intent in this regard is made clear by the repeated references

in public statements of the Superintendant and Board Members that a principal purpose

of the ‘Redesign’ was to restore the “neighborhood school.”114 In Horseshoe, elementary

schools were designated as either primary or intermediate. Primary elementary schools

enrolled kindergarten to third grade students, intermediate elementary schools enrolled

fourth to sixth grade students. Under the plan, each student would walk to a nearby

school for one level and ride a bus to school further away (but within their zone) for the

other level, requiring students to enroll in a new school after third grade. When

Educational Redesign was introduced, the district sought to substantially reduce the

number of bused students and make neighborhood schools a more prominent feature.

“The city now has many more naturally integrated neighborhoods than it had in the past,”

announced the Redesign proposal. “The desire to have students who live in naturally

integrated neighborhoods attend schools near their homes [was a reason] for proposing a

revision of the racial/ethnic guidelines.”115

Educational Redesign did away with Horseshoe’s grade structure116 and

reinstituted pre-desegregation neighborhood school boundaries. The new definition of

what constituted racial balance meant that twenty-two elementary and eight secondary

schools would be deemed naturally integrated—enrollment could be entirely composed

of neighborhood students.117 Most of these schools were in the Sunset and Richmond

districts—middle class neighborhoods with pockets of strong opposition to school

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integration.118 (Zuretti Goosby, a former member of the school board, suggested that part

of Educational Redesign was in fact targeting the flow of middle-class students living in

western neighborhoods leaving the district for private schools.119 With these changes, the

district projected a 44.3 percent reduction in the number of K-5 students needing

transportation (see Table 10).120 This was a significant cutback. However, approximately

7,800 students would still need transportation to the forty elementary schools that were

located in neighborhoods that were not naturally integrated.121 These schools, located

primarily in central and eastern neighborhoods that tended to be more racially

concentrated (Chinatown, Western Addition, and Bayview-Hunters Point), required

students to be bused in from neighboring areas.122 The district carved small satellite

feeder zones of several blocks each with a demographic profile that would help maintain

an otherwise racially concentrated school’s racial balance. Some schools needed only one

feeder zone. Other schools required multiple feeder zones. (For middle school,

boundaries were constructed by combining groups of nearby elementary schools.

Similarly, groups of middle schools served as high school feeders.123) Although most

schools in the district had attendance areas, alternative schools and programs were open

to San Francisco students regardless of where they lived.

Table 10. Transportation for K-5 Students, Pre- and Post-Educational Redesign

Spanish Surname

Other White

Black

Chinese

All Others

Total Enrollment (K-12) 9,134 18,267 14,116 11,561 10,794 1977-78 School Year (bused) 2,086 2,758 4,998 1,820 2,338 1978-79 School Year (proposed bused) 1,114 1,637 3,022 977 1,054

Source: Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

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The Burden of Busing

An inability to reconcile the district’s student assignment policy with the logic of a

neighborhood logic generated tension that ran across and along racial lines. During the

January 1978 public hearings, when the final phase of Educational Redesign was

presented to parents, opposition was strong among community advocates who viewed the

district’s plan as unfairly distributing the burdens of busing. Horseshoe, with its

requirement that all elementary students be bused for one of the two elementary school

divisions, evenly distributed busing across the district’s racial and ethnic subgroups. At

least in theory. The practice of Horseshoe proved to be more complicated. The district

had a number of “double bus” students—more likely to be black—as well as some

“double walk” students.124 Calling for a more equitable system, the Bayview-Hunters

Point Community Coordinating Council took the issue up with Mayor George Moscone,

writing: “we are not criticizing ‘busing’ but we are concerned over the fact that it is being

administered unfairly. Many of our children are bused out of this community with few

coming back into the community. There should be an equality in busing in order that our

schools will not be ‘short changed.’”125 Educational Redesign only exacerbated the sense

of inequity harbored by many parents. The Redesign boundaries were drawn in a way

that created heavy rates of busing from students living in the predominantly black

neighborhoods of Bayview-Hunters Point, Oceanview, and Western Addition, the largely

Latino neighborhood of the Mission, and Chinatown.126 While the overall number of

students able to walk to their neighborhood school increased under Redesign, blacks

continued to be the subgroup bused in larger numbers.127 And in contrast to the

Horseshoe plan, Redesign required busing only for those students residing in feeder areas

designated by the district. These students were bused for the entirety of elementary

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school. Likewise, students living within the boundaries of a school’s pre-desegregation

neighborhood catchment area had the option of walking to that school for the entire

gradespan. (A similar situation occurred for middle school students.) Standing before the

school board, Owen O’Donnell, a white father living in the predominantly black Western

Addition, testified, “One wonders why it is the children in the Western Addition are

going to 16 separate schools and why those in the Sunset and the Richmond and Pacific

Heights—areas that are politically active—are not.” O’Donnell suggested the Educational

Redesign was a “racist document.”128 Parent J.S. Hunt similarly complained, “It’s not fair

that some children in some districts be bused all the time and others not at all.”129

The district deftly used a drastic population change taking place to bolster

Redesign. A steep postwar increase in the number of public school students produced an

enrollment of over 93,000 by 1965. But by 1977, the district enrolled less than 64,000

(see Table 11). “The school district has lost 27,000 students in the past seven years

because of a change in the city’s demographics, the declining birth rate, and the shift to

private schools by parents who don’t want busing,” stated Alioto. “The district projects a

loss of 9,000 more students by 1981 and insists it does not need all the schools to

operate.”130 In addition to the apparent fiscal benefits, shuttering schools increased the

district’s ability to integrate. The enrollment decline allowed the district to propose

consolidating and closing several under-enrolled schools and schools with low

neighborhood “walk student” populations.131

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Table 11. Enrollment in San Francisco Public Schools

School Year Total Enrollment

1965-66 93,269 1966-67 93,045 1967-68 93,710 1968-69 92,653 1969-70 90,790 1970-71 82,757 1971-72 80,902 1972-73 79,042 1973-74 74,723 1974-75 72,443 1975-76 70,045 1976-77 67,778 1977-78 63,872

Source. Research, Planning, and Accountability Department, San Francisco Unified School District.

By closing schools, SFUSD was able to redirect educational dollars away from under-

utilized buildings and toward the establishment of several new alternative and magnet

programs. Among the instructional changes Redesign proposed was a high school

program focused on business and commerce, an academic middle school in the Portola

neighborhood,132 a “complex” of schools with a creative arts focus, and new reading,

counseling, and media centers. By augmenting instructional spending and instituting new

programs and schools, Alioto hoped to increase the student population. And by

strategically locating these programs, Alioto sought to integrate racially identifiable

schools in the central and eastern sections of the city. “Each of these programs is

designed to meet special areas of interest,” Alioto wrote. “The concept behind alternative

education is the recognition of the fact that in a diverse, pluralistic student population

specialization in areas of curriculum and teaching styles is essential”133 But families did

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not want to lose a school or program in their neighborhood, and teachers were fearful of

job loss and school transfers.134 Resistance to the school closure and instructional

components of Educational Redesign emerged in three communities where proposed

changes would have substantial impact: Treasure Island, Bayview-Hunters Point, and the

Mission District.

Treasure Island & Bayview-Hunters Point

To comply with racial balancing expectations laid out in Educational Redesign, the

district anticipated needing to bus 1,637 white elementary students. Nearly 40 percent of

these children were not permanent San Francisco residents. They belonged to military

families, many of whom were temporarily stationed at Treasure Island Naval Air

Station.135 The district’s plan was to bus the primarily white students136 living on

Treasure Island to Sir Francis Drake, George Washington Carver, and Dr. Charles R.

Drew schools in the Bayview-Hunters Point district. For middle school, the primarily

black students of Bayview-Hunters Point would be bused to Treasure Island Annex, a

district-run school built with federal funds for military families.137 To make the busing

scheme more palatable to parents, the schools were designated the “Traditional School

Complex,” a community of schools emphasizing the “3 Rs” that would receive additional

resources and technical assistance from the central office and the district’s community

partners.138

Treasure Island parents, backed by the United States Navy, vigorously resisted the

district’s efforts to integrate their children with the children of Bayview-Hunters Point. A

spokesperson for the Commandant of Treasure Island described the district’s plans as

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“discriminatory to the military family,”139 and an alternate proposal was advanced by a

Staff Judge Advocate that called for the establishment of a K-8 magnet school on the

island.140 Bayview-Hunters Point parents responded in turn by announcing that they

would not welcome Treasure Island students to their neighborhood. Standing in front of

an “uncomfortable” audience of Treasure Island parents and teachers, community leader

Julia Comer spoke out. “I give you a hearty welcome from Bayview-Hunters Point. I

want you to know that we are people over there. I wasn’t born in Africa. I was born in the

United States, but I can understand your frustration. . . Now listen to me. If you don’t

want our kids here, we don’t want you over there. It’s no harder for your kids to travel

over that bridge than it is for our kids. . . If you don’t want to come to us, keep your rear

end home!”141 Attempting to make his case to the parents of the island, Superintendent

Alioto argued, “Your school has one of the lowest concentrations of black students in San

Francisco. In Bayview-Hunters Point, they have the largest concentration of black

students in the city. That’s the problem. You want to know what the logic is for matching

these two communities? Well, that’s it.”142

As Comer’s statement demonstrates, busing had its detractors among the largely

black Bayview-Hunters Point residents intended to be desegregation’s primary

beneficiaries. The neighborhood was home to many parents dissatisfied with the

implementation of busing under Horseshoe, and many families and community leaders

decided to cast their lot with neighborhood schools. In 1978, black students were 28.9

percent of San Francisco’s elementary enrollment, yet they were projected to account for

38.7 percent of the busing population under the Educational Redesign proposal.143

American Indian students were to be bused at a rate proportionate to their districtwide

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population. All other subgroups would be bused disproportionately less.144 “Why should

we be bused to your schools when we have good schools here?” proclaimed LaVert

James, a fourth grader at Drew elementary. “Why should we be bused to your schools

while none of your kids are bused here to ours?”145 To validate the neighborhood logic,

proponents pitted busing against academic achievement. Framed in a mutually exclusive

way (either busing or academic achievement), racial integration could be expressed as a

value, but not at the expense of academics. “We’re not going to let our kids be bused—

white black, purple, or whatever,” stated Goldie Judd, a white parent who served as

president of the Visitacion Valley PTA. “What we’re worried about is the quality of the

educational programs for everyone.” Echoing this sentiment was Idaree Westbrook, a

black parent of public school children: “I don’t care if the schools are not integrated. The

key thing I want blacks to look at is the education plan.” 146

The contention between Treasure Island and Bayview-Hunters Point

neighborhoods illustrates the tremendous difficulty school district officials had

integrating largely black and largely poor schools. After attempts to convince families to

go along with this part of Redesign failed, the district acquiesced, dropping its plans to

bus students to Bayview-Hunters Point and preserving the Treasure Island Annex as a K-

5 school. The district had no workable alternative. Consequently, Redesign, as approved

by the school board, excluded the schools in Bayview-Hunters Point from the district’s

integration plans, leaving them with high concentrations of black students (see Table 12).

While the concession satisfied many parents, the school board’s “decision to rescind the

desegregation of Treasure Island elementary school because of the opposition of the

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white parents and personnel of the United States Department of the Navy” was central to

the SFNAACP’s cause of action.147

Table 12. Black student enrollment in Bayview-Hunters Point schools (percent)

1977-78 1978-79

(projected) 1983 Consent Decree

Dr. Charles Drew Elementary 82.4 80.6 Conversion to an academic middle school with increased counseling to prepare its graduates to Lowell High.

Sir Francis Drake Elementary 52.4 91.3 Instructional focus on computer science and a new attendance area with mandatory assignments in order to achieve racial balance.

George Washington Carver Elementary 86.0 90.5

Affiliation with San Francisco State University as a lab school. Academic enhancements and a new attendance area with mandatory assignments in order to achieve racial balance.

Source: Special plan for Bayview Hunters Point, Consent Decree, SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. at 54-56; Civil Rights Action for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, 20. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1, 6/30/78).

From 1978 to 1982, during which the parties lumbered toward a settlement, Educational

Redesign remained in place, with Bayview-Hunters Point left out of the busing

provisions meant to create racially-balanced schools. (As an alternative to busing, the

district sought and received private foundation grants directed toward improving the

instructional programs at the three Bayview-Hunters Point elementary schools.148) School

board member Richard Cerbatos saw the exclusion of Bayview-Hunters Point as racism.

“People have refused to go to school out there,” he observed. “We’ve had this system of

allowing people to get out of it.” Associate superintendent for integration Stanley

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Schainker conceded, “The real key was trying to avoid forcing (teachers and

administrators) to work at Bayview-Hunters Point and parents to send their kids to

Bayview-Hunters that didn’t want to. We have consistently said we weren’t going to

force-bus people into Hunters Point.”149

So when the consent decree was finally adopted, it included a special plan for the

neighborhood.150 As a means of encouraging parents to consider these schools, the

consent decree required four schools to be converted into magnet schools and schools

with enriched programs. Pelton Middle School was to become a new academic high

school. Dr. Charles R. Drew Elementary would be converted into an academic middle

school with increased counseling and a goal of preparing its graduates for Lowell, the

city’s flagship academic high school. Sir Francis Drake Elementary would integrate a

computer science curriculum into its program. And Dr. George Washington Carver

Middle School was to receive specialized technical assistance from San Francisco State

University.

Despite its provisions meant to improve the educational circumstances of the

Bayview-Hunters Point community, the Consent Decree generated considerable friction

within the city’s African American community. Organizing against the proposed

gradespan conversions of Drew and Pelton was particularly strong. “Our children must

not be singled out as the pawns that make this unreasonable agreement functional,”

demanded Drew parents. “Our community did not request conversion to a middle

school.”151 The Court received over 300 signatures of residents who regarded the

proposed changes to Pelton “unfair to the students, the parents, and the community.”152 In

response, Judge Orrick wrote, “the Court understands that the children at Drew School

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and Pelton School to some extent are being asked to make sacrifices, but it believes that

the changes mandated in the decree ultimately will redound to their benefit.”153 By the

summer of 1983, a citizens advisory committee headed by Reverend Cecil Williams

urged the SFNAACP and the district to withdraw from its plans to convert the Bayview-

Hunters Point schools.154

The consent decree also called for the district to employ a method of school

reconstitution—all school staff and administrative positions for Bayview-Hunters Point

schools were to be vacated and refilled. The SFUSD and SFNAACP determined that

reconstitution would provide the flexibility necessary to hire new personnel that would

best fit the new instructional offerings. In some cases, employees, after reapplying to

their old positions, would be rehired. In other cases, new staff—certified and non-

certified—would fill vacant positions. A group of mostly African American parents

formed the Bayview Hunters Point Coalition for the Preservation of Our Community

Schools and filed a motion to intervene in the court case.155 “We cannot understand why

these employees will be removed from their positions and forced to interview to come

back next year and do the same things that they are already doing successfully right

now,” declared neighborhood organizer Julia Comer. “I know full well that this will be

used as a power play by Superintendent Robert Alioto to pick only the people who are

complacent and compliant with his wishes.”156 The SFNAACP dismissed the group by

arguing that turning the case into one centered on labor issues would not best serve

students,157 and in the end, the motion to intervene was denied by Judge Orrick.158

The Consent’s Decree’s special plan for Bayview-Hunters Point was inconsistent

with calls made by some integration proponents for a system-wide solution. The

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additional funds and technical assistance provided to the three elementary and one middle

school in the neighborhood meant that only a small subset of the city’s black population

would receive its benefits, and that the many African American families living in the

Western Addition, Potrero Hill, Oceanview, and elsewhere would be left out. The

attention to these schools also left out those Bayview-Hunters Point residents who were

to be bused to schools outside of the neighborhood. Making this point was Barbara

Holman, past president of the San Francisco Parents Teachers Association and a former

member of the parent’s group that advised the district on the Horseshoe plan, who said,

“A system-wide desegregation problem exists in San Francisco, it affects 100% of the

schools. The Decree applies a solution to 7% of the students.”159

In the months leading up to its proposed start date, the special plan for Bayview-

Hunters Point was jeopardized by the reality of the state appropriations process. The costs

for implementing this and other elements of the consent decree were entitled to

reimbursement by the state,160 but the district was able to convince the California

Legislature to approve an up-front appropriation of nearly $8 million. However,

Governor George Deukmejian decided to remove the earmark from the final state budget.

The line-item veto led the school district to announce a delay in the implementation of

most of the consent decree, including the planned conversions of Drake, Carver, and

Pelton schools.161 Furthermore, the district used the Governor’s action to convince the

court and the SFNAACP that converting Drew into an academic middle school would be

too costly. The parties decided instead to close Drew and bus its 220 students to schools

in other neighborhoods.162 The plan was particularly offensive to Bayview-Hunters Point

residents because Drew was one of the newest schools in the city and had been the first

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school in San Francisco to be named after an African American—the distinguished

physician and scholar Charles R. Drew.

For weeks following the start of the new school year, parents and their children,

some carrying signs reading Where is the NAACP? Out to lunch! and Don’t bus me

out!163 prevented buses from transporting neighborhood children to schools across

town.164 “We always have to trade off and our children are not happy where they are

going,” complained Sylvester Brown of the Bayview Hunters Point Coordinating

Educational Committee and Coalition. “Whites don’t want to come here, and we can’t

care less. But now they are forcing us to their schools.”165 Led by Reverend Cecil

Williams, protesters accused the district and the NAACP of relying on one-way busing to

integrate the schools. “I have no qualms with the busing situation,” claimed Mildred

Burford, “[But] if they’re going to bus. . . they should bus some kids in to our

neighborhood. I want equality. I have no qualms with integration, but I want two-way

busing” Essle Webb of the Committee demanded that the Bayview-Hunters Point

community be included in the negotiation of the consent decree, remarking “[The

SFNAACP] can’t act on our behalf.” Brenda Brown, also of the Committee, echoed, “We

have a right to say where our kids will be bused”166 SFNAACP officials responded by

stating that the consent decree was crafted to provide quality education throughout the

city and that Drew was shuttered because its educational program was inferior.167 The

mobilization by neighborhood proponents led the SFNAACP and SFUSD to renegotiate

the consent decree. Under the revised terms, approved by the Court in November 1983,

Drew re-opened as a magnet Early Childhood Development Center in January and the

parties agreed to find a new location for the academic middle school previously planned

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for the Drew facility. The revised decree also included modifications to the planning and

implementation deadlines for various other aspects of the original consent decree,

including a push back of the opening of the new academic high school to September

1984. 168

Mission District Intervention

The Consent Decree provided a vehicle for the SFNAACP and the school district to reach

consensus without a trial. But the Decree also effectively locked out other community

advocates from participating in the process of devising San Francisco’s student

assignment plan. MALDEF;169 REAL, a coalition of organizations based in the Mission

District; and, other Latino-serving organizations supported the general structure and goals

of the consent decree.170 But, conveying a “great dissatisfaction” from members of the

Latino community, MALDEF wrote to the Court, “Latino students were unfairly

burdened by the settlement while receiving nothing such as the enhancement programs

provided by the terms of the settlement for the schools in the Bayview-Hunters Point

area.” 171

Among the concerns outlined by MALDEF was a Consent Decree provision that

reduced the maximum percentage of racial/ethnic subgroups for nineteen historically

segregated schools, nine of which were Mission District schools with an imbalance of

Latino students.172 Advocates also worried that the district would place Spanish bilingual

programs in Bayview-Hunters Point and bus Latino students in from the Mission District

for the purpose of integration.173 A third concern was the potential impact of the Consent

Decree on English learners and the need for improved academic achievement for Latino

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students.174 Underlying these concerns was the belief that the class definition was too

broad. After the Court ruled that the class of all children of school age “who are, or may

in the future become, eligible to attend that public schools of the SFUSD” was adequately

represented by the SFNAACP,175 advocates in the Mission District urged the court to

exclude “Hispanics” from the class definition so that they would not be bound to the

terms of the decree.176 The Consent Decree, wrote MALDEF, “now forecloses and

detrimentally affects Hispanic students who seek an equal educational opportunity in the

San Francisco Unified School District.”177 School board member Myra Kopf concurred.

“To assume that the plaintiffs in this case, no matter how well versed, are representing all

parents, and are experts on the educational needs [of all school children. . .] is at best very

disturbing, and most unrealistic.”178 The Court responded by stating the MALDEF’s

objection “reflects a basic misunderstanding” about the lawsuit and the decree: “This is a

school desegregation action, and the gravamen of plaintiffs’ claim is the alleged unlawful

racial segregation of children in the District. The remedy sought and the remedy proposed

is systemwide desegregation This is not an action to establish an entitlement to a certain

standard of academic excellence or to a right to certain programs to meet specific

needs.”179

Neither MALDEF nor any other community advocate was given a formal role

when the Court approved the Consent Decree in May 1983. Rather, the Court relied on

assurances by the SFUSD that a good faith effort would be made to seek out the

participation of Latino advocates and to develop measures aimed at improving the quality

of education for Latino students.180 Over the summer, representatives from various

Mission District organizations representing the Latino community formed an ad hoc

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committee, led by MALDEF, to discuss and monitor the implementation of the decree

and address needs to the school district.181 MALDEF was granted amicus status, and,

partly due to their efforts, when the Consent Decree was modified in November 1983, a

special plan was approved for Horace Mann, a middle school in the heart of the Mission

District. Reconstitution would be extended to the school and it was to be transformed into

an open enrollment magnet school emphasizing second language acquisition.182

Freedom of Choice

In rationalizing the need for Educational Redesign, Superintendent Alioto noted the

district’s failure to desegregate the schools under Horseshoe. Despite the Court’s long-

standing and unambiguous ruling, the number of racially balanced elementary schools

had steadily decreased over the years.183 For the 1973-1974 school year, 59 of 98

elementary schools met the Court’s expectation of racial balance (applying the ±15

percentage points criterion). Five years later, only 36 of 91 elementary schools were

balanced (see Figure 4). The district fared no better in the upper grades. By the 1978-

1979 term, only 11 of 28 secondary schools were racially balanced.

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Figure 4. Racial Imbalance in Elementary Schools, 1973-1977

Source. Data from first four columns from Report to Federal District Court Regarding Elementary School Desegregation, June 24, 1977. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70-1331 SAW, RG21 NARA. Fourth column from Educational Redesign, A Proposal, 30. Box 1, RFA/HIA. N.B. Racial balance measured by ±15 definition of acceptable racial balance. Imbalanced schools were predominantly imbalanced (i.e., too many or too few students) by Black (25), Spanish Surname (25) and Chinese (23) subgroups. Nine schools were imbalanced by white. Several schools imbalanced on multiple subgroups.

Resegregation was due in large part to the Temporary Attendance Permit (TAP), the

district’s alternative enrollment program. TAP was established to provide relief to those

students with “just cause” to attend a school other than the one to which they were

assigned. Ideally, central office administrators evaluated each TAP application

individually within the context of the district’s desegregation goals and the transfer

5950 45 40 36

3947 52 58

55

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78

Num

ber o

f Ele

men

tary

Sch

ools

School Year

Schools out of balanceSchools in balance

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applicant’s impact on the racial balance of both sending and receiving school.184 There

were various ways for students to show cause for a transfer. For example, following the

Supreme Court’s ruling requiring school districts to provide equal education opportunity

to limited and non English speakers,185 the San Francisco Board of Education adopted a

resolution permitting students to attend a school with a bilingual or ESL program if one

was not provided at the assigned school.186 The district operated an assortment of

alternative schools, including a year-round elementary school, a school with multi-grade

groupings, and an experience-based work program for high school students with non-

traditional schedules.187 These alternative schools had no attendance area and could be

requested by students residing anywhere in San Francisco. The district also gave

preference to the school attended by an older sibling, further constraining the district’s

desegregation efforts.

But aside from these “just causes,” the TAP program was widely understood and

exploited as a loophole for families unhappy with their assignment and it soon grew into

a segregatory mechanism. Transfers were awarded for what were commonly regarded as

trivial and non-relevant reasons. Asked about the types of justifications parents

submitted, Albert Cheng, the district’s Affirmative Action Officer, testified, “Some of the

things I listened to were asthma problems. I remember there were some complaints of

motion sickness. The children were not able to ride on buses because of motion

sickness.”188 Margery Levy, chair of the district’s Affirmative Action Review Committee

and the former director of the district’s Desegregation and Integration office, testified that

the district’s alternative enrollment programs had “historically done the greatest damage

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to the effective implementation of San Francisco desegregation plans.” More detrimental

than any other factor, the school board:

Permitted the creation of exceptions for almost any reason so that the number of

permits rose into the thousands. The effect was that there were approximately

more students attending a school site outside their school of assignment than there

were attending their school of assignment.189

Stakeholders understood TAP to be an illegitimate segregatory mechanism because it

bypassed busing. Optional Areas, a pre-busing choice program, had similarly been

understood to be a segregatory mechanism, but in its case because it bypassed certain

neighborhood schools. Under the program, certain geographic zones throughout the city

were designated as Optional Areas. “The option is given to certain persons within these

areas either to send their children to the schools within the neighborhood or to send them

outside of said area,” stated a 1961 letter to the district from the National Lawyers Guild.

“We believe that this compounds the problem of segregated schools because said optional

areas were found usually to be populated by Caucasians.”190

Under TAP, transfers were so abundant and disruptive to desegregation efforts

that during its negotiations with the school district over secondary school integration191

the NAACP made closing TAP loopholes a settlement condition. Operation Integrate

would be “worthless” otherwise.192 But TAP continued and there was such heavy use of

transfer requests and sufficient leniency in the approvals made by staff that by the 1977-

1978 school year, 31 percent of the district’s approximately 64,000 students attended a

school other than the school they were assigned to for desegregation purposes.193 Not

surprisingly, TAP was a central issue in the SFNAACP’s 1978 complaint, which charged

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the school district with establishing and operating the TAP program in a manner that

created, maintained, and increased racial segregation, in violation of the federal court

injunction established under Johnson.194

Educational Redesign’s provisions recommending the closure of eight schools

helped the district counteract the segregative aspects of parental choice. School transfers

exacerbated segregation because transfer preferences often fell along racial lines. Fewer

schools meant fewer open seats, and so less opportunity to transfer. But more

fundamentally, under Educational Redesign, the “Temporary Attendance Permit” was

rebranded as an “Optional Enrollment Request” (OER), and stricter controls over the

process of reviewing and approving applications were promised. “One of the goals of

Educational Redesign is to provide more educational options for students,” announced

the district. “The student assignment proposal is designed to provide an opportunity for

students to choose the program which best suits their needs.”195 Similar to TAP, OER

applications were to be approved so long as space was available at the receiving school

and the racial balance of both the sending and receiving school would not be adversely

affected. However, Alioto promised to more closely monitor the OER process and to

report to the school board monthly on the racial balance of every school. This allowed the

district to describe the OER process as its “primary voluntary desegregation” effort for

years to come.196

Choice in Bayview-Hunters Point

Because Educational Redesign’s proposal to bus students from Treasure Island had fallen

apart, the district pushed back its goal to integrate the Bayview-Hunters Point elementary

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schools by three years. In the meantime, Drew, Drake, and Carver would have both open

enrollment and an assigned attendance area. In order to entice students from outside the

neighborhood to these schools and thereby alleviate racial imbalance, the district

promised extra funding and support.197 Those Bayview-Hunters Point families unhappy

with a neighborhood school assignment had the option of sending their children to school

in Glen Park with the district providing transportation. These families could also choose

some other school in the district through the regular OER process.198

The district’s special arrangement for Bayview-Hunters Point was immediately

attacked by the SFNAACP as segregative and unconstitutional: “The defendants have

offered discredited ‘Freedom of Choice’ plans by means of which the burden of

desegregating these schools will be placed upon the very victims of the past illegal

misconduct of these officials, the students.”199 San Francisco’s plan for Bayview-Hunters

Point was analogous to a system employed by New Kent County School Board in

Virginia and other “freedom of choice” plans in the South that subverted the intent of

Brown. In a case that reached the Supreme Court in 1968, New Kent County allowed

families to choose which of the county’s two schools to enroll their child.200 In the three

years of implementation, no white family chose to enroll their child in all-black Watkins

school and only a small number of black families chose to enroll in predominantly white

New Kent school. The Supreme Court ruled that schools were required to racially mix to

a degree greater than what would occur merely as a result of ending discrimination and

ordered New Kent County to consider assigning students based on geographic zones or

other measures that would force desegregation.

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“Despite the efforts of these defendants to somehow suggest that racial

segregation might be a preferred or better mode of schooling for the black children at

Hunters Point, it is clear that such arguments have been singularly unpersuasive in the

federal courts,” argued the SFNAACP. “The warehousing of the black students at

Hunters Point will only make easier their isolation from the other students, and will more

greatly guarantee that they will be forced to attend schools which are both separate and

unequal.”201 Despite vigorous opposition, the SFNAACP was unable to forestall the

implementation of Educational Redesign.202 The controversial choice aspects of Redesign

remained in place until the 1983 approval of the Consent Decree, which called for the

mandatory assignment of students to Drake and Carver and the closing of Drew for the

purpose of racial balance.203 Beyond the special school choice provisions just for

Bayview-Hunters Point, the SFNAACP was troubled by the districtwide OER program.

Considering it to be overly permissive, the SFNAACP insisted that the program be

terminated. The district refused.204 The resulting compromise was to dial down the

“trigger point” for granting OER requests from 43 to 40 percent of the applicant’s

racial/ethnic subgroup at both sending and receiving schools.205

Choice, whether as loophole under TAP or as voluntary desegregation effort

under OER, was understood by the SFNAACP to be segregatory. Even with controls in

place, the opportunity to undermine or bypass the district’s racial balancing mandate was

considered a genuine threat. The OER was a central component of Educational Redesign

so the district steadfastly sought to preserve it. The SFNAACP, unable to succeed at

eliminating OER, in the end, was forced to agree to a minor modification. The

SFNAACP’s concerns notwithstanding, choice was a powerful logic that resonated with

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many parents, particularly since desegregation plans were often framed as the transfer of

choice from parents to the government (while residents formerly chose schools by buying

into preferred neighborhoods, they lost this option under forced desegregation plans).

Myra Kopf, a school board member and a long-time parent activist,206 advised the Court

to attend to “the needs of parents and students for self determination and the ability to

make choices which affect their lives” when considering the district’s student assignment

plan.207 And as student assignment was transformed in the years to follow, choice became

an ever more prominent logic that structured how student assignment was framed and

understood.

“On a long road. . .”

A public hearing was held on February 14, 1983—exactly five years after Redesign was

approved by the school board— to determine the fairness of the proposed consent decree.

It must have been a powerful moment when Grandvel Jackson stood before Judge Orrick

to speak. In 1959, soon after the Supreme Court ruled on Brown, Jackson was serving as

president of the San Francisco branch of the NAACP. He recalled:

“Old” Pat Brown was governor. And he sent his envoy down here to work with

me and to establish whether or not there was really segregation in the San

Francisco schools. And it was that effort that I believe that started us on a long

road, twenty years and more, trying to find some resolution to this problem.208

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Jackson, who had been at the forefront of school desegregation efforts since that time,

went on to express his strong support of the goals and objectives of the settlement. “My

many years of experience with attempts to desegregate the schools of San Francisco have

led me to conclude that the best hope the children have for an integrated quality

education is through the development of the plans and procedures outlined in the Consent

Decree,” he stated. “In addition, I feel strongly that this Court must stay actively involved

with the implementation process so that the goals of the Decree become a reality.”209

Current NAACP branch president Jule Anderson proclaimed, “This is an historic moment

for the children of San Francisco. We look forward to the speedy implementation of the

goal.” But Anderson cautioned that the decree “can only be considered fair when in

practice the district acts affirmatively to fulfill the promises of better educational

programming and restores the confidence of the Hunters Point family that they are in fact

an integral part of the school district.”210

Despite the laudatory tone struck by the NAACP, the consent decree drew

concern from some proponents of integration upset with the compromise that had been

made. Barbara Holman, past president of the San Francisco Parents Teachers Association

and a former member of the parent’s group that advised the district on Horseshoe, stated:

The Consent Decree is a sad culmination of ten years of litigation between the

NAACP and the SFUSD. Thoughtful people of many races are saying, “It is just a

way for both parties to save face, and it will mean nothing to most of the

students.” … To those of us who put our children on the buses 10 years ago with

hopes for real integration and academic improvement, this is a bitter ending. The

Consent Decree is a pale substitute for what is really needed. The SFUSD should

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be satisfied. I hope the NAACP is embarrassed. The time, energy, and legal fees

should have resulted in a plan that would serve all of the students affected and

disadvantaged by segregation practices.211

Referring to the new definition of racial balance put forth in Educational Redesign and

now affirmed in the settlement, Margery Levy urged the court to “hold the SFUSD to the

spirit of this Consent Decree and not permit the SFUSD to maintain all non-white

schools… [which goes against] the spirit of the Consent Decree calling for system-wide

desegregation.”212

Why did the SFNAACP agree to a consent decree that preserved so much of

Educational Redesign? Although they went to trial on the basis that Redesign would

result in resegregation, Judge William Orrick, in his Order and Memorandum denying

plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment, had signaled the difficulty plaintiffs

would have proving segregatory intent in a trial. The school district continued its

assignment system largely intact while the SFNAACP was able to secure concessions for

Bayview-Hunters Point. For all parties, the consent decree avoided what would have been

a long, expensive, and racially-charged trial. “It was certainly far better to resolve these

matters among professionals, who know what they’re doing, rather than in a two- or

three-month trial, reported daily, which would have not only been tedious for those

concerned, but would have been very detrimental, I think, to the well-being of the school

district,” observed Orrick following the submission of the proposed settlement in

December 1982.213 Several months after the fairness hearing, on May 20, 1983, Orrick

issued an opinion finding that the consent decree was fair, reasonable, and adequate and

ordered that the parties immediately begin its implementation.214

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In tracing the history of political contention over student assignment in San Francisco, as

the district transitioned from Operation Integrate (which included the court-mandated

elementary program, Horseshoe) to Educational Redesign, the empirical evidence reveal

the crucial role cultural characterizations of public education and its beneficiaries

perform. Cultural characterizations underlie political rhetoric deployed by policy makers

and community advocates, they influenced the legitimacy of policy alternatives, and, by

their constitution in pre-existing policy, they guided the course and content of subsequent

policy alternatives. Three logics of action structured the cultural characterizations in play.

Proponents and opponents of the various policy alternatives, whether from the

community or from the district, were constrained by logics of school integration,

neighborhood schools, and school choice.

Integration. Contention was rooted in the different views of school desegregation

instantiated in the status quo policy and Educational Redesign. Desegregation had been

understood, framed, and crafted to principally entail fixing the ratio of white to black

students at every school such that it approximated the ratio of white to black students

districtwide.215 The California State Board of Education’s guidelines establishing a ±15

percentage point threshold for racial imbalance was accepted by the NAACP and adopted

by the Court for San Francisco and other school districts. But this was a

conceptualization that was on its way out. Changes in desegregation jurisprudence and

the regulatory environment in California, as well as rapid demographic changes occurring

in San Francisco called into question the viability and appropriateness of Operation

Integrate. Nevertheless, Educational Redesign’s redefinition of racial balance alarmed

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proponents of desegregation. No longer would racial balance involve assignment such

that black and white students fell within a band that established a minimum requirement

and maximum limit based on districtwide demographics. Redesign proposed that racial

balance would henceforth eliminate minimum numbers of black and white students and

create a standardized school-wide maximum of 45 percent across the nine recognized

racial and ethnic subgroups. This same standard applied to black and white students

(which in 1978 comprised one-fifth and nearly one-third of the district, respectively) as

was applied to Korean and American Indian students (both of which were less than two

percent of the district). While Redesign was described as a means of achieving racial

diversity, many argued that this was not true desegregation.

Neighborhood. In addition to different conceptualizations of integration, political

contention emerged as neighborhood advocates sought to voice their preferences. A

neighborhood system, whereby student assignment was based strictly on school

catchment borders of contiguous area, had been instituted decades earlier. And elements

of a neighborhood-based system remained throughout the course of the district’s various

integration plans. The NAACP sought to minimize these neighborhood components,

especially since widespread residential segregation existed in the city. The introduction of

Educational Redesign, with its return to pre-Horseshoe school boundaries, was viewed as

a setback by proponents of desegregation. Furthermore, Redesign’s disparate impact

across neighborhoods was a source of contention. The proposal was regarded by some as

an attempt to retain middle class families residing in the western part of the city at the

expense of poorer families living in the central and eastern neighborhoods. In the end, in

the face of unwavering resistance from both white and black families, Redesign left

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Bayview-Hunters Point out of the busing provisions. The Consent Decree pumped more

resources into Bayview-Hunters Point schools with the goal of drawing students in from

outside of the neighborhood, relying on the “carrot” of magnet schools rather than the

“stick” of busing that was used for other neighborhoods.

Choice. A third logic, in which stakeholders struggled over the legitimacy of

parental choice in student assignment, emerged over time. Under Horseshoe and

Operation Integrate, parental choice was constituted solely as a mechanism to be used for

situations that were out of the ordinary. This remained the case under Educational

Redesign. But choice hearkened back to freedom-of-choice plans used in the South as a

means of avoiding integration, so the NAACP strongly opposed choice provisions

supported by the district. The NAACP eventually relented and agreed to a settlement that

left the choice elements intact. The controls promised by the district, and the recasting of

choice as a “voluntary desegregation” mechanism set the stage for its more prominent

and justifiable role in future student assignment plans.

Robert Alioto began his tenth year as Superintendent in July 1984. The district was on an

upswing. Enrollment and average daily attendance numbers were up. Six new alternative

schools opened. An expanded summer program was offered. During her State of the City

Address, Mayor Dianne Feinstein proclaimed, “Our schools have weathered the

challenges of the 1970’s and through higher achievement have returned academic

respectability to San Francisco. City schools are holding their own among the top 18

urban districts in California, and our third graders are ranked Number One.”216 In

addition, the district was successfully meeting the expectations laid out in the consent

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decree. For the 1984-1985 school year, all regular schools had at least four racial and

ethnic subgroups and only George Washington Carver had a subgroup comprising more

than 45 percent of its student body. Among the district’s alternative schools, only two,

New Traditions and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Academic, had subgroups over 40

percent of its student body.217 As specified by the settlement, the district’s efforts were

supported with desegregation funds from the state,218 and by the end of the decade, the

annual reimbursement to the district was in excess of $25 million a year (see Table 13).

“The Consent Decree is the charter, the constitution,” Judge William H. Orrick advised

the parties to the case in 1984. “And it is, and shall remain, inviolate until such time… as

it comes to the attention of the Court, after due process, that some of the sections should

be changed, or some new plan adopted. But for now, that’s it.” 219

Table 13. SFUSD state reimbursement for desegregation, 1982-1990

School Year Desegregation Costs (SFUSD) Final Audit Report (CDE)

1982-1983 $285,942 $105,959

1983-1984 $2,859,423 $2,467,172

1984-1985 $7,710,382 $6,586,293

1985-1986 $16,162,164 $15,233,053

1986-1987 $23,848,651 $23,139,265

1987-1988 $24,621,372 $23,340,180

1988-1989 $28,176,087 $26,091,903

1989-1990 $27,148,880 $26,812,763

Source: Local Defendants’ 1997-98 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (7/31/98, DF873)

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Notes

1. Wilson Riles, Remarks on February 5, 1975 (Attachment). SFNAACP v. SFUSD. (DF132, 1/4/80)

2. Veronica Pollard, “Major plan to redesign S.F. schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 30, 1977.

3. Michael Taylor, “S.F. School ‘Redesign’ OKd,” San Francisco Chronicle, February 16, 1978.

4. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, Robert F. Alioto miscellaneous papers, Hoover Institution Archives (hereafter RFA/HIA).

5. Ibid.; See also Report To Federal District Court Regarding Elementary School Desegregation, June 24, 1977, 58. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, Record Group (hereafter RG) 21, The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (hereafter NARA); The court’s ruling is also provided in Johnson, 339 F. Supp 1315.

6. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978; Veronica Pollard, “What People Say about S.F. School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 18, 1978; Walter Blum, “In the Winter of Redesign,” San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner, April 30, 1978; Affidavit of Robert F. Alioto. Johnson v. SFUSD. April 17, 1978, Carton 101, Folder: “San Francisco Settlement Proposal” BANC MSS 84/175c.

7. Walter Blum, “In the Winter of Redesign,” San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner, April 30, 1978.

8. During one hearing, students and parents physically prevented Alioto’s sedan from leaving school grounds. Annie Nakao, “Schools Chief’s Exit Blocked by Angry Mob,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 8, 1978; At another hearing attendees reportedly chanted “Kill Alioto! Kill Alioto!” while the superintendent sat stone-faced before them. Jack Cheevers, “The Resurrection of San Francisco’s Schools,” San Francisco Business, August 1982.

9. Veronica Pollard, “What People Say about S.F. School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 18, 1978.

10. Johnson, 339 F. Supp. 1315, vacated and remanded, 500 F.2d 349. The lawsuit was filed on June 24, 1970. Plaintiffs representing a group of black children in public elementary schools filed civil rights complaint seeking relief against public school officials who they charged with creating, maintaining and operating a dual schools system by means of policies and practices of racial discrimination and segregation which policies and practices deprived the plaintiffs of their constitutional rights under the United States Constitution

11. Memorandum of Decision, Judgment and Decree, July 9, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA.

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12. When viewed on a map, the zones approximated an inverted U, hence its name. On

Horseshoe, See Weiner, Kirp, Fine, When Leadership Fails and others.

13. Harry Johanesen, “Chinese Protest School Bus Plans,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 6, 1971; SFNAACP Attorney Arthur Brunwasser recalled: “It was all pure demagoguery… I was really angry at Alioto. He brought the city… into a virtual race riot by encouraging people to think they don’t have to obey a federal court order. And I had authorization to cite him for contempt of court for filing and encouraging a violation of a federal court order.” Interview, Arthur Brunwasser, January 27, 2010; Years earlier, in 1962, Alioto had been hired by the school board as a special counsel to defend the district against the SFNAACP lawsuit, Brock v. SFUSD.

14. San Francisco Chronicle, “NAACP Official Accuses Alioto,” June 8, 1971.

15. Riles quoted in San Francisco Chronicle, “Riles critical of S.F. on school integration,” September 13, 1971; Wilson Riles became the first African American to be appointed to a California statewide office and the first African American state superintendent in the United States.

16. Yoritada “Yori” Wada, “Working for Youth and Social Justice: The YMCA, the University of California, and the Stulsaft Foundation.” Oral History Transcript. BANC MSS 92/ 770, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. Wada was a prominent civic leader who would go on to become the first Asian American to serve on the University of California Board of Regents.

17. San Francisco Grand Jury Report. 1974-75 Investigatory Grand Jury. “Board of Education” July 28, 1975. RFA/HIA

18. “Cities in Crisis: The Future of Urban Education,” Symposium at the College at New Paltz, State University of New York, May 23- 24, 1983. RFA/HIA.

19. San Francisco Public Schools Commission, “The Educational Components of an Integrated School System,” November 17, 1976. SFHC; The San Francisco Public Schools Commission was appointed by State Superintendent of Schools Wilson Riles in January 1975 and was also known as the Riles Commission and the Roth Commission, for the chair, William Matson Roth. The general objectives of the Commission were to “identify problems in the School District and to assist in implementing agreed-upon solutions” particularly in the areas of finance and management. Ibid., 5; The Commission comprised civic leaders from business, labor, religion, and education, and was supported through grants from local foundations. See also Letter from William M. Roth, Chair, San Francisco Public Schools Commission, December 1, 1976 (DF132, 1/4/80).

20. Interview, Hoover Liddell, October 24, 2009.

21. School closures were projected to yield $4.9 million in savings, reduced busing, $1.6 million. Educational Redesign, A Proposal, January 1978, RFA/HIA; Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Final Plan for Cutting School Budget,” San Francisco Chronicle, July 29, 1978.

22. Michael Taylor, “S.F. School ‘Redesign’ OKd,” San Francisco Chronicle, February 16, 1978; Affidavit of Robert F. Alioto. Johnson v. SFUSD. April 17, 1978, Carton 101, Folder: “San Francisco Settlement Proposal” BANC MSS 84/175c; Educational Redesign, San Francisco Board of Education Resolution #81-31Sp1.

23. Walter Blum, “In the Winter of Redesign,” San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner, April 30, 1978. For example, Horace Mann was slated to become a creative arts magnet high school to help students “acquire the background and readiness necessary to enter a variety of art fields.” Educational Redesign. A Proposal, 17, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA; Magnet schools, a product of federal school desegregation efforts, received magnet program funding that typically went toward developing unique curricular themes

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or instructional methods in order to attract white families. For more on magnets, see Christine Rossell, The Carrot or the Stick for School Desegregation Policy: Magnet Schools or Forced Busing (Temple University Press, 1991); Horace Mann was chosen because it is centrally located in the Mission District and at the time was the most under-enrolled junior high school in the general vicinity, according to district officials. Arleen Gallagher, speaking on behalf of the Horace Mann teachers, argued that the school did not need to become a magnet since it was already a racially balanced school with programs that had received praise. “Why are you looking for alternatives? Isn’t success enough?” Annie Nakao, “Schools Chief’s Exit Blocked by Angry Mob,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 8, 1978; In the end, due to the community opposition, Horace Mann was allowed to remain a neighborhood school. Walter Blum, “In the Winter of Redesign,” San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner, April 30, 1978.

24. Walter Blum, “In the Winter of Redesign,” San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner, April 30, 1978.

25. As I describe, the status quo policy was Operation Integrate, which comprised Horseshoe, the assignment system established for elementary students under Johnson v. SFUSD, and a voluntarily implemented system, similar in structure, for secondary students.

26. The racial categories were: Spanish Surname, Other White, Black/Negro, and Asian/Oriental.

27. “Step One: A Student Assignment Design for September 1974” c1974. SFHC; As a result of the district’s efforts with Operation Integrate, the SFNAACP’s secondary education desegregation lawsuit against the SFUSD was voluntarily dismissed in 1976. The case is O’Neill v. SFUSD,CA 72-808 RFP (1972).

28. Educational Redesign, A Proposal. RFA/HIA. At the time, the district recognized nine subgroups were: Black, Chinese, Spanish Surname, Other White, Filipino, Japanese Korean, American Indian, and Other Non-White. Categories have been relatively stable although labels have changed over time (for example, from Spanish-Surname to Spanish-Speaking to Latino).

29. Keyes v. School District No. 1, Denver, Colorado, 413 U.S. 189 (1973); In addition to what I describe in the narrative, Keyes is significant for extending protection to Latinos (“Hispanos” was the term used by the Colorado Department of Education ) since they “suffer identical discrimination” to African Americans (“Negroes”).

30. Ibid., 208. In his opinion, Justice Brennan refers specifically to Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education , 402 U.S. 1 (1971), a case in which the Court noted a difference between de facto and de jure school segregation; Justice Powell, while concurring in part with Keyes, dissented on the question of intent, stating: “The net result of the Court's language, however, is the application of an effect test to the actions of southern school districts and an intent test to those in other sections, at least until an initial de jure finding for those districts can be made. Rather than straining to perpetuate any such dual standard, we should hold forthrightly that significant segregated school conditions in any section of the country are a prima facie violation of constitutional rights.” Keyes, 413 U.S. at 232.

31. Soria v. Oxnard School District Board of Trustees, 488 F. 2d 579 (1973), 585.

32. Memorandum of Decision, Judgment, and Decree, July 9, 1971, 3. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA.

33. Weigel references several cases, including: United States v. School District 151, 404 F. 2d 1125 (1968); United States v. Montgomery County Board of Education, 395 U.S. 225, 231 (1969); and, Coppedge v. Franklin County Board of Education, 394 F. 2d 410 (1968).

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34. Johnson v. SFUSD (C-71 1877; C-71 2163; C-72 2980); Robert G. Nelson et al., Intervenor-

Appellants (C-71 1878; C-71 2189); Guey Heung Lee et al., Plaintiffs in Intervention-Appellants (C-71 2105).

35. Johnson v. SFUSD, 500 F. 2d 349 (1974). The Ninth Circuit also vacated and remanded a decision by Weigel to prevent the intervention of a group of parents of elementary school children of Chinese ancestry who opposed the reassignment under Horseshoe with instructions to permit their intervention; Interview, Arthur Brunwasser, January 27, 2010.

36. Most SBE members had been appointed by Governor Edmund G. “Pat” Brown, Sr.; For a discussion on the SBE’s activities during this period, see Hendrick, Education of Non-Whites.

37. California Administrative Code, Title 5, Education, §2010 (October 23, 1962).

38. California Administrative Code, Title 5, Education, §2011 (2/63); §135.3(e) (April 1963).

39. Jackson v. Pasadena School District, 59 Cal. 2d 876 (1963).

40. Bureau of Intergroup Relations, Office of Compensatory Education, Racial and Ethnic Survey of California Public Schools. Part One: Distribution of Pupils, Fall, 1966 (Sacramento: California State Department of Education, 1967), 2.

41. California Administrative Code, Title 5, Education, §2011(c). The regulation, put forth by the State Board of Education in 1962 and amended in 1969, has since been eliminated.

42. Hendrick, Education of Non-Whites, 112.

43. Regulations were repealed on March 12, 1970. The Council of the Great City Schools, “Educational Equality/Quality in San Francisco Public Schools” (c1971), 61. Box 95, Folder 3, SFHC.

44. In 1970, the Legislature added §1009.5 to the Education Code: “No governing board of a school district shall require any student or pupil to be transported for any purpose or for any reason without the written permission of the parent or guardian.” The California Supreme Court ruled that if construed to bar assignment of pupils to non-neighborhood school the section would be unconstitutional. San Francisco Unified School District v. Johnson, 3 Cal. 3d 937 (1971), at 954.

45. The Assignment of Students to Schools Initiative (Proposition 21) proposed to amend the Education Code by adding §1009.6: “No public school student shall, because of his race, creed, or color, be assigned to or be required to attend a particular school.” In addition, it repealed a recently passed law (the Bagley Act, AB 724) that added §5002 & §5003 to the Education Code which (1) established factors for consideration in preventing or eliminating racial or ethnic imbalances in public schools; (2) required school districts to report numbers and percentages of racial or ethnic groups in each school; and (3) required districts to develop plans to remedy imbalances; San Franciscans barely defeated Proposition 21, with 136,180 opposed and 135,948 in favor. San Francisco Registrar of Voters, “General Election Recapitulation of Voters,” November 22, 1972; Statewide, the measure passed in a landslide, 4,962,420 (63.1%) to 2,907,776 (36.9%). Tony Miller (Acting California Secretary of State), “A study of California ballot measures 1884 to 1993,” (Sacramento, CA: California Secretary of State, 1994).

46. Santa Barbara School District v. Superior Court, 13 Cal. 3d 315 (1975).

47. Crawford v. Board of Education of Los Angeles, 17 Cal.3d 280 (1976); NAACP v. San Bernardino City Unified School District, 17 Cal.3d 311 (1976); The ruling was a clarification of the Court’s decision in Jackson, 59 Cal.2d 876 which held that: “The right to an equal opportunity for education and the harmful consequences of segregation require that school boards take steps, insofar as

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reasonably feasible, to alleviate racial imbalance in schools regardless of its cause” (881); See also “Plans to Alleviate Racial and Ethnic Segregation of Minority Students,” California Administrative Code, Title 5, Sections 90-101.

48. H. LeRoy Cannon, SFUSD Legal Advisor to Lee S. Dolson, President, Members of the Board, Bill Maher, Commissioner Elect, Peter Mezey, Commissioner Elect, Ben Tom, Commissioner Elect, Robert F. Alioto, Superintendent. “Desegregation. Duty of Governing Board to Desegregate Schools Whether Segregation is De Jure or De Facto,” (Internal Memo), November 23, 1976. Carton 105, Folder: “Materials still to be looked at Re: Request to local defs.” BANC MSS 84/175c.

49. Crawford, 17 Cal. 3d 280, at 287 (Footnote 1). The California Supreme Court ruling did not immediately jeopardize the Horseshoe plan. Since it was heard in a federal district court, barring a Ninth Circuit or Supreme Court ruling or an act of Congress, the Johnson order would remain in effect.

50. California Administrative Code, Title 5, Education, Chapter 7, §90-101. Plans to Alleviate Racial and Ethnic Segregation of Minority Students (adopted 9/8/77, since repealed). See also, California Administrative Register 77, No. 38-7-9-17-77.

51. The earlier report is James S. Coleman and others, “Equality of Educational Opportunity,” [also known as the “Coleman Report”] (U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1966). The report describes the benefits of an integrated education for black students; A supporter of integrated schools, Coleman delivered a talk to the American Educational Research Association in advance of a report by the Urban Institute on white flight from cities. While the study, which came to be known as “Coleman’s white flight report,” did not directly address busing or any other coercive means to desegregate schools, Coleman used it to criticize the federal courts, which while well-intentioned were, from his perspective, contributing to the unintended consequence of exacerbating segregation. “Thus a major policy implication of this analysis is that in an area such as school desegregation, which has important consequences for individuals and in which individuals retain control of some actions that can in the end defeat the policy, the courts are probably the worst instrument of social policy” (12). Coleman, “Recent Trends in School Segregation,” Educational Researcher 4 no. 7: 3-12; Coleman remarked that strategies are “basically producing resegregation, unfortunate strategies that are the outgrowth of court cases.” In response, NAACP legal counsel Nathaniel Jones contended that Coleman’s seemingly revised position was indicative of declining interest in civil rights by white liberals and that the academic sector was “just not reliable” as a civil rights ally. Coleman and Jones quoted in Paul Delaney, “Long-Time Desegregation Proponent Attacks Busing as Harmful,” New York Times, June 7, 1975.

52. Quote from Coleman, “Recent Trends,” 12; Coleman’s provocative remarks and the attention they generated became a springboard for scholarly debates on the issue. For example, in August 1975, the Brookings Institute hosted “Symposium on School Desegregation and White Flight” in which several papers (edited by Gary Orfield) emerged critiquing Coleman’s position. While the question of causality would remain unsettled among academics, the phenomenon underlying Coleman’s comments—the rapid racial shift in urban public schools—had been brought to the fore. Following the Supreme Court’s ruling in Swann, across the nation, large urban school districts were experiencing significant enrollment declines among white students. For a discussion on the impact of Coleman’s second report in academia, see Diane Ravitch, “Social Science and Social Policy: The ‘White Flight’ Controversy,” Public Interest, 51 (1978): 135-49; Ravitch notes that in 1968, 16 of 29 large urban districts had student enrollments that were majority white. By 1976, only 8 still had white majorities. Among these 29 districts, San Francisco’s loss of white students (percent) was among the highest. Over this period, Atlanta lost 78.3 percent of its white students, Detroit lost 61.6 percent, and San Francisco lost 61.5 percent. (N.B. As I describe below, Ravitch’s enrollment numbers for SFUSD differ slightly from the enrollment figures provided by SFUSD.) Ibid., 146-147.

53. Memorandum of Decision, Judgment and Decree, 7-8. July 9, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA.

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54. Research, Planning & Accountability Data Center. “Student Enrollment, 1967-68 to 2008-

09.” San Francisco Unified School District; The San Francisco Chronicle pinned the half-empty schools on “real competition from private schools in San Francisco and the attraction of what is perceived by young parents to be better educational facilities in the suburbs.” San Francisco Chronicle, “Redesigning Our Schools,” Editorial, January 3, 1978; While the citywide absentee rate on the first day of the Horseshoe plan was 44 percent, schools in Chinatown experienced absentee rates as high as 76 percent. Only 10 of the 750 Chinatown students showed up to be bused out of the neighborhood that first day. Ron Muskowitz, “Many Absent From School,” San Francisco Chronicle, September 14, 1971.

55. Fay Fong, coordinator of the Chinatown efforts, vowed that parents would not “accept anything less than an end to busing” before the public school boycott would end. Freedom schools gradually declined in popularity and most Chinese families returned to the school system within a few years. Julie Smith, “Chinese Schools Set to Open,” San Francisco Chronicle, September 14, 1971; The Committee opposed the busing of Chinatown students to schools outside the neighborhood. In addition, there was an “unspoken feeling” of opposition to the busing of non-Chinese students to the neighborhood. Harry Johanesen, “Chinese Protest School Bus Plans,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 6, 1971; On the topic of Freedom Schools, see Phillip A. Lum, “The Chinese Freedom Schools of San Francisco: A Case Study of the Social Limits of Political System Support” (PhD Diss. University of California, Berkeley, 1975).

56. Andrew Moss, Senior Statistician, “Evaluation Report #5. SFUSD Integration Department. A 5-Year projection of the Ethnic Composition of SUFSD.” April 1, 1976. Carton 105, BANC MSS 84/175c

57. Ibid.; To serve the new matriculants, the district established high school newcomer centers for adults and bilingual education classes for youth speaking Spanish, Tagalog, Chinese, and Vietnamese. Civil Grand Jury Report, 1979-80. RFA/HIA.

58. As one example, Alioto: “In the late 1960’s new immigrants from Southeast Asia, the Philippines and South and Central America began migrating to San Francisco. At the same time there was a decline in the San Francisco birthrate. This has resulted in a student enrollment in which there is no longer a predominant racial/ethnic group. These facts must be considered when looking at the racial/ethnic balance of our schools.” Educational Redesign, A Proposal, 21. RFA/HIA; These trends continued into the 1980s. By 1985 Chinese students became the largest subgroup in the district, and by 1989, there were more Latino students than black students.

59. Affidavit of Robert F. Alioto, April 17, 1978. Johnson v. SFUSD, No. C-70 1331 SAW. Carton 101, Folder: “San Francisco Settlement Proposal.” BANC MSS 84/175c.

60. Ibid.

61. Regarding the consent decree: Arthur Brunwasser, Memo to File—Johnson v. SFUSD February 11, 1975. Carton 133, Folder: “Correspondence of Attys: Brunwasser Files” BANC MSS 84/175c; Brunwasser to George Krueger, LeRoy Cannon, William Hannawalt, November 4, 1975. Carton 133, Folder: “Correspondence of Attys: Brunwasser Files” BANC MSS 84/175c; On rescinding settlement agreements: Joseph E. Hall, SFNAACP to Arthur Brunwasser, March 15, 1976. Carton 133, Folder: “Correspondence of Attys: Brunwasser Files” BANC MSS 84/175c. Joseph Hall was SFNAACP president from 1975 to 1978.

62. Arthur Brunwasser to Joseph E. Hall, January 9, 1978. Box 133, Folder: “Correspondence of Atty Brunwasser Files” BANC MSS 84/175c.

63. Thomas I. Atkins was a prominent attorney who was lead counsel or of record in school desegregation cases in Detroit, Cleveland, Columbus, Indianapolis, and several other cities. Complaint. Civil Rights Action for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1, 6/30/78).

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64. Interview, Arthur Brunwasser, January 27, 2010.

65. Thomas Atkins to Joe Hall, February 27, 1978. “Correspondence of Atty. Brunwasser Files” Box 133, Folder: “Correspondence of Atty Brunwasser Files” BANC MSS 84/175c.

66. Civil Rights Action for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1, 6/30/78); The team of attorneys, in addition to Thomas I. Atkins, included, Nancy B. Reardon, Eva Patterson, Annette Green, Oliver Jones, Peter Cohn, as well as Nathaniel R. Jones, General Counsel for the NAACP Special Contribution Fund, and James Hunt, Susan Ogdie, and Lee Thompson from McCutchen Doyle.

67. Ibid.; Hooks quoted in Michael Harris, “NAACP Sues to Halt Cutbacks in S.F. Schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, July 1, 1978.

68. Junius Camp, Supervisor, Community Relations Department to Parents of Guardians of SFUSD Students. “Requests for Correct Racial/Ethnic Identification”(Undated Memo). In Answer to complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (8/16/78; DF12); Parents were asked to declare on behalf of their children the appropriate category as “considered by themselves, by the school, or by the community.”; Other White was the subgroup for “all Caucasians not counted under Spanish Surname.”; At various points in time, the district would employ a Spanish-Speaking or Spanish-Surname/Spanish-Speaking category; The Asian/Oriental subgroup brought together Chinese, Japanese, and Korean students; the Other Non-White subgroup was mostly comprised of other Asian and Pacific Islander populations; The racial and ethnic identification scheme the SFUSD had been using was based on the categories utilized by the State Board of Education for its racial and ethnic surveys of California public schools. Bureau of Intergroup Relations, Office of Compensatory Education, Racial and Ethnic Survey of California Public Schools. Part One: Distribution of Pupils, Fall, 1966 (Sacramento: California State Department of Education, 1967). See also California Administrative Code, Title 5, §2011, c1978 (since repealed).

69. Memorandum of Decision, Judgment, & Decree, 15, July 9, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA.

70. Memorandum and Order Requiring the Parties to Bus Blacks for School Desegregation, 4. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA.

71. Horseshoe plan, Submitted by the SFUSD, Version of July 1, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA; On SBE Guidelines: California Administrative Code, Title 5, Education, §2011(c).

72. Andrew Moss, Senior Statistician, SFUSD. “Evaluation Report #5. SFUSD Integration Department. A 5-Year Projection of the Ethnic Composition of SUFSD.” April 1, 1976. Carton 105, BANC MSS 84/175c; A Plan for Desegregation and Integration SFUSD, June 9, 1971. Ibid.; With the implementation of Operation Integrate, the ±15 percent guidelines were extended to all nine recognized subgroups.

73. Interview, Arthur Brunwasser, January 27, 2010.

74. Memorandum of Decision, Judgment, and Decree, 5. July 9, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA. The district submitted Horseshoe, the SFNAACP’s plan was dubbed Freedom. Weigel approved both plans and allowed the district to select the one it would implement. Unsurprisingly, the district opted to implement its own plan.

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75. Andrew Moss, Senior Statistician, SFUSD. “Evaluation Report #5. SFUSD Integration

Department. A 5-Year Projection of the Ethnic Composition of SUFSD.” April 1, 1976. Carton 105, BANC MSS 84/175c.

76. Ibid.

77. Report: An Educational Redesign for the SFUSD: A Proposal for Consideration, 6. January 6, 1976. Carton 101, BANC MSS 84/175c.

78. Educational Redesign, A Proposal, 21. RFA/HIA. At the time, the district recognized nine subgroups were: Black, Chinese, Spanish Surname, Other White, Filipino, Japanese Korean, American Indian, and other; These categories were determined in 1964, when Schools Superintendent Harold Spears, facing pressure from various community groups, began its annual surveys of the various ethnic groups in the city. Brunwasser letter to the editor, Commentary, July 1972; These categories have been relatively stable although labels have changed over time (for example, from “Spanish-Surname” to “Spanish-Speaking” to “Latino”).

79. Affidavit of Robert F. Alioto, 30. April 17, 1978. Johnson v. SFUSD. Carton 101, Folder: “San Francisco Settlement Proposal” BANC MSS 84/175c.

80. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s plan analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

81. Civil Rights Action for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, 20. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1, 6/30/78); For order shortening time and for Temporary Restraining Order, 3-4. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF9, 8/14/78).

82. Fairness Hearing February 14, 1983. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 289, 2/7/83).

83. Plaintiffs’ Report to the Court: A Supplemental Reply to Defendants’ Response to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, 10-12. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF216, 1/23/81).

84. Penick v. Columbus Board of Education, 583 F.2d 787 (1978). See chart submitted to the court at footnote 93. The scheme was developed by Gordon Foster, professor of education at the University of Miami at Florida who had served as an expert to the Court in several school desegregation cases.

85. Proposition 13 amended the state constitution by bringing property values to their 1975 value, limiting property taxes to one percent of property value, and restricting reassessments to two percent annually. The initiative passed by a 2 to 1 margin on June 6, 1978. For discussions on the impact and lasting effects of Proposition 13 on public education, see Alan Bersin and others. Getting Beyond the Facts: Reforming California School Finance (The Chief Justice Earl Warren Institute on Race, Ethnicity & Diversity, University of California, Berkeley Law School, 2008); Mary Perry. How much is enough? Funding California’s public schools (Palo Alto, CA: EdSource, Inc., 2000).

86. Bersin and others, Getting Beyond Facts.

87. Michael Harris, “How Prop. 13 Would Affect City Services,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 22, 1978.

88. Annie Nakao, “School budget fight just heating up,” San Francisco Chronicle, July 30, 1978; The budget of $167.4 million was $23 million less than prior year budget. Early projections estimated a budget reduction of as much as eighteen percent. Veronica Pollard, “Please Against S.F. School Cuts,” San Francisco Chronicle, August 2, 1978.

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89. School budget fight just heating up. San Francisco Chronicle, July 30, 1978. Hooks was

quoted during a press conference held after the SFNAACP court filing, hours before Prop. 13 was to take effect.

90. Stanley Weigel, the judge who presided over the Johnson lawsuit, was originally assigned to the case. Weigel recused himself two months after the lawsuit was filed because his son-in-law anticipated a professional relationship with the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund in San Francisco. Order of Disqualification. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF16, 9/6/78); The case was reassigned to Albert Wollenberg who in turn disqualified himself from presiding for having an interest that might have been affected by the outcome. Order of Disqualification. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF20, 9/13/78); William H. Orrick presided over the case from September 15, 1978 until his retirement in January 2002. Orrick died on August 15, 2003.

91. Motion requesting the certification as a class action. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF46; 1/2/79); Notice of Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF190, 6/6/80).

92. Opinion and Order (Consent Decree). SFNAACP v. SFUSD, 576 F. Supp. 34 (1983).

93. Notice of Motion for Dismissal or Abstention. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF72, 4/13/79).

94. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34; Plaintiffs’ Response to Renewed Motion. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF225, 8/26/81).

95. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34.

96. Notice of Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF190, 6/6/80); Plaintiffs’ Pretrial Statement. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF236, 3/18/82).

97. Notice of Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF190, 6/6/80).

98. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34.

99. Gary Orfield to the Court, Progress Toward a Settlement Agreement, August 10, 1982. In Declaration of Deputy Attorney General John Davison. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF601, 9/21/90); Notice of Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF190, 6/6/80); SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34.

100. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶12. While the decree called for the elimination of segregation in every school, program, and classroom, the focus was always placed at the school level. Lulann McGriff, an active parent and member of the NAACP education issues committee testified: “Too frequently, classrooms are segregated within a school site. I visited schools where the majority of Black students are put in separate classrooms. I have also observed all the Black students seated in the back of the classroom or n a separate grouping within the room. This type of segregation within a class is most harmful to the self concept of all the students.” Statement of LuLann McGriff. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF285, 2/7/83); McGriff would go on to become SFNAACP president in a few years.

101. Marshall Shwartz, “Mayor Tears into Integration Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 6, 1971.

102. The survey responses reported in this paragraph are from: “What San Francisco thinks about busing” San Francisco Examiner, August 29, 1971. The poll was carried out for the Examiner by Multi-Media Research Company.

103. Mike Miller, “The Tenure of Tom Shaeheen: An Analysis,” (unpublished memo) January 15, 1972. From the personal files of Libby Denebeim; There were, however, signs that board opposition to

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school desegregation was softening. “When we got this order from Judge Weigel, we got it without a trial,” recalled Arthur Brunwasser. “And the lawyers in the City Attorney’s office… weren’t putting that much time and effort in it. It appeared to me the school district wanted the schools to be desegregated.” Support for racially integrated schools among board members and the superintendent would become more apparent in the future.

104. Although Shaheen had a base of supporters from within the black community, in 1972, the newly elected school board voted to dismiss him. “As is often the case, the superintendent responsible for administering the court mandate [i.e., Shaheen] generated such opposition that the board of education sacrificed him at the end of the first year of desegregation.” Frederick M. Wirt, “Power in the City. Decision Making in San Francisco,” (University of California Press, 1974), 293.

105. See SFUSD—History The Board of Education Philosophy and Politics. (n.d.) From the personal files of Libby Denebeim. (Lucille Abrahamson, Dr. Zuretta Goosby, John Kidder, and four member who were elected on an anti-busing platform—Lee Dolson, Dr. Eugene Hopp. Father Reid, and Sam Martinez).

106. Maps 4, 6, 8, and 10 in the Appendix illustrate the racial and ethnic housing segregation present in 1970. Memorandum of Decision, Judgment, and Decree, 6-7. July 9, 1971. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA.

107. Board of Education policy. Adopted August 4, 1936. In Memo from Harold Spears, Superintendent. August 1964. Box 93, SFHC.

108. Report of the Ad Hoc Committee of the Board of Education to Study Ethnic Factors in the San Francisco Public Schools, SFUSD. April 2, 1963. Box 93, SFHC.

109. Breyer to Ad Hoc Committee Meeting, San Francisco Public Schools (Memo), November 15, 1962. In Plaintiffs Fourth Request for Production of Documents, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF100, c8/79).

110. Supplementary Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, 19. Johnson v. SFUSD C-70 1331 SAW, RG21, NARA.

111. Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC) Community Information Sub-Committee “San Francisco School Desegregation. Some Facts and Figures,” June 1, 1971. SFHC; The CAC was composed of 65 parents, community leaders, and students along with the district. The committee deliberated over several potential plans, including Horseshoe, the plan ultimately adopted. The SFNAACP crafted its own plan, named Freedom. See Weiner, Educational Decisions.

112. Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC) Community Information Sub-Committee “San Francisco School Desegregation. Some Facts and Figures,” June 1, 1971. SFHC.

113. San Francisco Chronicle, “S.F. Integration Plans Are Filed,” June 11, 1971.

114. For order shortening time and for Temporary Restraining Order, 3-4. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF9, 8/14/78).

115. Educational Redesign, A Proposal, 21. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

116. Under Horseshoe, the grade configuration was K-3; 4-6; 7-9; 10-12. “We must discontinue the practice of constantly shifting students from school to school, improve the continuity of instruction, and bring increased stability to the schooling of the learner,” noted Alioto. “New grade level configurations…must be considered to meet this objective” (3). The gradespans were revised so that elementary schools enrolled kindergarten to fifth grade students, middle schools enrolled sixth to eighth

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grade students, and high schools enrolled ninth to twelfth grade students. Carton 101, “Report: An educational redesign for the SFUSD: A proposal for Consideration, 1-6-76.” BANC MSS 84/175c.

117. Michael Taylor, “S.F. School ‘Redesign’ OKd,” San Francisco Chronicle, February 16, 1978; Educational Redesign. A Proposal, 22, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

118. Veronica Pollard, “Major Plan to Redesign S.F. Schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 30, 1977.

119. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

120. Under Educational Redesign, schools were consolidated and closed so that while 91 elementary schools were in operation during the 1977-78 school year, 62 were projected to be in operation the following year.

121. Educational Redesign. A Proposal. January 1978. During this period, the available district documents typically reported only K-5 transportation data. The district provided transportation for all elementary school students who lived more than one mile from their assigned school as well as students enrolled in certain elementary school programs. Transportation was provided to middle school students only if it required multiple transfers or a lengthy travel time on Muni, the city's public transportation system. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

122. Veronica Pollard, “Major Plan to Redesign S.F. Schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 30, 1977.

123. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA. The district projected eight secondary schools would be naturally integrated.

124. Peter Esainko, Statistician, SFUSD Integration Department, “Evaluation Report #7. Ethnic Variations in Busing.” March 15, 1976. Carton 105, BANC MSS 84/175c.

125. Letter to Mayor George Moscone from Ad Hoc Committee of the Bayview-Hunters Point Community Coordinating Council. (Received) January 29, 1976. Carton 105, Folder: “Materials duplicate of 2 & 3rd Requests.” BANC MSS 84/175c.

126. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s plan analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

127. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA; Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

128. Veronica Pollard, “What People Say about S.F. School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 18, 1978; Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

129. Veronica Pollard, “What People Say about S.F. School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 18, 1978.

130. Ibid.; An added dimensions to all of this was the Field Act, which obligated the district to upgrade its schools (several of which were under-enrolled) in order to comply with California earthquake standards. “We’re being faulted for closing schools,” Alioto griped to a Chronicle reporter. “I wish [the School Board] closed these schools seven years ago. Some of them should never have been rebuilt, but the Board chose to rebuild them under the Field Act. Now we’re living with the sins of the past. . . We’re pumping money into buildings when it should go for kids.” Walter Blum, “In the Winter of Redesign,” San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner, April 30, 1978,

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131. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

132. The Portola neighborhood is part of the Outer Mission community planning district and borders South Bayshore.

133. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

134. John F. Feilders, Profile, the Role of the Chief Superintendent of Schools (Belmont, CA: Fearon Education, 1982).

135. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978; Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA. Some military families were stationed in the Presidio.

136. Approximately half of the 750 students to be bused from Treasure Island were white. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

137. At the time, Treasure Island Annex was an elementary school. The district planned to convert it into a middle school. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978; Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

138. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

139. San Francisco Chronicle, “Another Salvo at School Plan,” January 22, 1978.

140. Marlin D. Seiders, Petition to Appear. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF270, 2/4/83).

141. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978. It was the Chronicle that described Treasure Island parents as “uncomfortable.” Julia Comer was a longtime San Francisco resident with 5 children attending public schools. She was chair of a districtwide committee organized to implement a multi-cultural education program and was a lifetime member of the PTA. Declaration. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 328, 8/12/83).

142. Walter Blum, “In the Winter of Redesign,” San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner, April 30, 1978.

143. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s plan analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978; Even under Horseshoe, with its requirement of busing for all students for part of their elementary education, the burden of busing was disproportionately borne by black students. While most students walked one span and were bused the other, some students had to double bus, others were able to double walk. Blacks were more likely to be the ones who had to double bus. Peter Esainko, Statistician, SFUSD Integration Department, “Evaluation Report #7. Ethnic Variations in Busing.” March 15, 1976. Carton 105, BANC MSS 84/175c.

144. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

145. Veronica Pollard, “What People Say About S.F. School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 18, 1978.

146. Veronica Pollard, “Alioto’s Plan Analyzed,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 19, 1978.

147. Civil Rights Action for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, Class Action, 20. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1, 6/30/78).

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148. Between 1978 and1982, the district sought and received grants in excess of $400,000 in

order to improve the instructional programs at Carver, Drew, and Drake schools, and to secure and fund services to these schools from San Francisco State University. Gloria R. Davis, Administrator, Bayview-Hunters Point Educational Complex to Aubrey McCutcheon, Attorney. In Local Defendants’ Memorandum in Response to Order Dated May 7, 1982. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF242, 5/14/82).

149. Cerbatos and Schainker quoted in Charles Hardy, “San Francisco Desegregation Deal Falling Apart,” San Francisco Examiner, August 21, 1983.

150. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶17-18. An additional element of the special plan was extending choice to South Bayshore students. Although most schools had assigned attendance areas (the district’s regular schools had assigned attendance areas while its alternative schools were open to all students residing in San Francisco), students living in South Bayshore had the option of attending district schools in other neighborhoods with transportation provided by the school district. Also, the consent decree contained a provision requiring the district to promote the South Bayshore neighborhood and the new academic offerings through the services of a “reputable public relations firm.” It was the hope of the SFNAACP and the school district that in the absence of mandated busing, the expanded academic offerings would draw a students to the South Bayshore schools and thus help racially integrate them.

151. Petition of Dr. Charles R. Drew Community. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF190, 2/4/83).

152. Pelton Academic Middle School Parent to the Court (Letter). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF266, 2/3/83).

153. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. at 49

154. San Francisco Chronicle, “Change in Desegregation Plan Sought,” August 10, 1983.

155. Webb v. Alioto, No. 83-3977 (1983); No. 83-2327 (1983).

156. Declaration, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF328, 8/12/83).

157. Thomas Atkins, General Counsel, NAACP to David P. Clisham, Carroll, Burdick & McDonough, July 21, 1983. In Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Motion for Intervention. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF327, 8/12/83).

158. Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF439, 9/25/86).

159. Statement of Barbara Holman. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF273, 2/4/83).

160. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶45; California Education Code, §42243.6, §42249.

161. Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of an Adjudication of Civil Contempt. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF306, 8/10/83).

162. Charles Hardy, “San Francisco Desegregation Deal Falling Apart,” San Francisco Examiner, August 21, 1983.

163. Dexter Waugh, “Bayview Boycott of One-Way Busing,” San Francisco Examiner, September 7, 1983.

164. Some students were to be bused as far away as Ulloa and 46th Street in the Sunset District, literally on the other side of town.

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165. Amelia Ashley-Ward, “The Fight to Re-Open Drew,” The Sun-Reporter, September 14,

1983.

166. Burford and Webb quoted in Dexter Waugh, “Bayview Boycott of One-Way Busing,” San Francisco Examiner, September 7, 1983.

167. Amelia Ashley-Ward, “The Fight to Re-Open Drew,” The Sun-Reporter, September 14, 1983.

168. Stipulation Pursuant to Consent Decree Paragraph 50 and Order Modifying Consent Decree, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF353, 11/29/83).

169. At the time, Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF), headquartered in San Francisco, had been counsel on behalf of Latino students in desegregation cases in Texas, Colorado, and Illinois.

170. Fairness Hearing, Morning Session, Reporter’s Transcript, February 14, 1983. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF352, 11/16/83).

171. Comments and Objections Submitted by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund as Amicus Curiae. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF272, 2/4/83).

172. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶13(b), ¶14. The Consent Decree stipulated that no racial or ethnic subgroup constitute more than 45 percent of the enrollment at any regular school, nor more than 40 percent at fourteen alternative schools. In addition, nineteen schools had enrollment caps ranging from 39.4 percent to 44.9 percent just for specific subgroups.

173. Irene Dea Collier, Chairperson, SFUSD Bilingual Community Council to the Court (Letter). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF269, 2/4/83). The Bilingual Community Council pointed to the district’s past practice of placing Chinese bilingual programs in the Mission and Spanish bilingual programs in Chinatown. “Although the schools’ ethnic balance was integrated on paper, in reality children rarely saw each other except at lunch time.”

174. Joaquin G. Avila and others (MALDEF) to the Court. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF272, 2/4/83).

175. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶11.

176. Statement from Morris Baller, Counsel, MALDEF. Morning Session R/T. February 14, 1983. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF352, 11/16/83).

177. Joaquin G. Avila and others (MALDEF) to the Court. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF272, 2/4/83).

178. Written Statement of Position of Myra G. Kopf. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF268, 2/4/83).

179. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. at 49.

180. Memorandum of the MALDEF, as Amicus Curiae, in support of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Civil Contempt. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF339, 9/8/83).

181. Irma D. Herrera, Director, Educational Programs, MALDEF, (Letter) June 14, 1983. Records of Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), M673, Box 142, Folder 1, Stanford University Special Collections; “NAACP v. SFUSD community meeting” (Handwritten Notes). May 12, 1983, June 21, 1983, June 29, 1983. Records of MALDEF, M673, Box 141, Folder 11, Stanford University Special Collections.

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182. Stipulation Pursuant to Consent Decree Paragraph 50 and Order Modifying Consent Decree.

SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF353; 11/29/83).

183. In other words, schools in which the percentage of pupils from any recognized subgroup differed by more than fifteen percentage points from the districtwide subgroup percentage.

184. Applications for Temporary Attendance Permit to Attend a School other than the Assigned. SFUSD Integration Department Form c1975, c1977. Answer to complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF12, 8/16/78); By 1977, the Integration Department handled TAP requests.

185. Lau v. Nichols, 414 U.S. 563 (1974).

186. Sanchez Resolution (San Francisco Board of Education #46-11A7, June 1974); Fairness Hearing Statement of Joseph Hall, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF289, 2/7/83).

187. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA. Some alternative schools were open enrollment, they drew from students from across San Francisco. Other alternative schools had an assigned attendance area that required students living outside of the area to petition for entry. Argonne/Golden Gate Elementary had a year-round program, New Traditions School had multi-age and multi-grade student groupings, and Downtown featured an experience-based work study program.

188. Deposition of Albert Cheng, February 22, 1980. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF180, 5/27/80)

189. Declaration of Margery J. Levy in Opposition to the SFUSD Proposed Sibling Policy. In Plaintiffs’ Response to SFUSD’S Position. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF356, 5/29/84); Levy was former director of the Desegregation and Integration Office (1974-1977) and current chair of the district’s Affirmative Action Review Committee.

190. National Lawyers Guild to Harold Spears, Superintendent, August 4, 1961. In Harold Spears, “The Proper Recognition of a Pupil’s Racial Background in the San Francisco Unified School District,” June 19, 1962. SFHC.

191. O’Neill v. SFUSD,CA 72-808 RFP (1972).

192. Margery Levy, Director, Office of Integration to Steven Morena, Superintendent. “Report of Pre-Trial Conference—Secondary School Desegregation Suit,” February 6, 1975. Carton 102, Folder: “Ofc. Integ/Deseg: notes of meeting with Judge Peckham on Second Deseg.” BANC MSS 84/175c. The SFNAACP suggested that the TAP loophole could be plugged by curtailing the processing of TAP’s during the summer months and by having school sites verify TAP requests.

193. Declaration of Donald I. Barfield. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1231, 4/11/01); TAP transfers were requested from across the racial/ ethnic subgroups. From 1973-1975, Chinese students had the largest TAP granted to student enrollment ratio among the district recognized subgroups. Bob Walker, Planning Specialist, Integration office to Margery J. Levy, Director, Integration Department. In Affidavit of Robert F. Alioto, November 11, 1975. Johnson v. SFUSD. Carton 102, Folder: “Ofc. Integ/Deseg. Concerns of Chinatown No. Beach area” BANC MSS 84/175c.

194. Civil Rights Action for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, 19-20. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1, 6/30/78).

195. Educational Redesign. A Proposal, January 1978. Box 1, RFA/HIA.

196. See, for example, Local Defendants’ 1984-85 annual report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF395, 8/1/85).

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197. The district promised a minimum of $225,000 for the improvement of these schools’

educational programs and to engage the services of the staff of a major university. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF12, 8/16/78).

198. Isadore Pivnick, Asst. Supt. School Operations Division, Letter to Parents, May 15, 1978. In Answer to Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF12, 8/16/78).

199. Order Shortening Time and for Temporary Restraining Order. Segregative Impact of Local Defendants’ Plans. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF9, 8/14/78).

200. Green v. County School Board of New Kent County (Virginia), 391 U.S. 430 (1968). With Green, the Court established six factors to be considered when determining whether a district was unitary: composition of the student body, faculty, staff, transportation, extracurricular activities, and facilities.

201. Order Shortening Time and for Temporary Restraining Order. Segregative Impact of Local Defendants’ Plans. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF9, 8/14/78). For the 1978-1979 term, Sir Francis Drake was projected to be 91.3% black; Carver, 90.5% black; Drew, 80.6% black.

202. The SFNAACP’s request for a Temporary Restraining Order was denied on August 16, 1978 and a subsequent appeal to the 9th Circuit failed.

203. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34.

204. Gary Orfield “Progress Toward a Settlement Agreement” (Memo), August 10 1982. In Declaration of Deputy Attorney General John Davison in Support of the State Defendants’ Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion to Modify the Consent Decree. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF601, 9/21/90).

205. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶13(d).

206. Kopf was elected to the Board of Education in 1978. She would go on to serve on the Board until 1990.

207. Consent Decree Fairness Hearing Statement. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF268, 2/4/83).

208. Reporters Transcript (morning session), February 14, 1983. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF352, 11/16/83).

209. Statement of Grandvel A. Jackson Re: Fairness of Consent Decree, p. 1-2. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF293, 2/7/83).

210. Morning Session Reporter’s Transcript (p. 25), Fairness Hearing (2/14/83), Morning Session. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF352, 11/16/83).

211. Statement of Barbara Holman. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF273, 2/4/83).

212. Statement of Margery Levy. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF284, 2/4/83).

213. Reporter’s Transcript, 6. December 30, 1982. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF861, 7/22/97).

214. Opinion and Order (Consent Decree). SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34.

215. By the 1970s, several districts facing desegregation demands enrolled a large percentage of Latino students. In fact, the Latino population in the SFUSD would surpass that of blacks by 1989. A

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generalization of this rule would be that desegregation involved controlling the ratio of white to non-white students.

216. State of the City Address, Office of the Mayor, 10/9/1984. Box 1, Folder 119, RFA/HIA.

217. Carver was 61.6% black for the 1984-1985 school year; New Traditions was 41.5% white and King was 41.1% black. Local Defendants’ 1984-85 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF395, 8/1/85).

218. California Education Code, §42243.6 & §42249.

219. Court Reporter’s Transcript. Thursday June 7, 1984. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF504; 3/12/88).

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PART TWO. School Diversity and Resegregation by Consent, 1983-2005 In July 1985, after ten years at the helm of the district, Alioto was ousted following a

protracted feud with the school board. The San Francisco Chronicle described it as a

firing in the middle of the night that “raises fears of a return to the bad old days when a

highly political Board of Education meddled in the day-to-day running of the schools.”1

After an interim term by SFUSD director of integration Carlos Cornejo, a divided school

board hired Ramon Cortines away from San Jose Unified School District in 1986.2

Cortines had experience working under court-mandated desegregation regimes in

Pasadena and San Jose, and he assured the court that he was “fully committed to the

desegregation of the San Francisco Unified School District as a step toward achieving the

goal of integration with a strong focus on improved learning and student achievement for

all students.”3 But his hiring angered African American community leaders who favored

a black educator for the position, St. Louis superintendent Jerome Jones.4 To quell any

tension, Cortines spent his first months on the job meeting with community

organizations, many of which represented “distinct racial/ethnic interests.”5 Following

the early retirement of Cortines in July 1992, the school board hired Waldemar “Bill”

Rojas, special education director for New York City public schools. As with the hiring of

his predecessor, black advocates were upset that the school board considered Rojas over a

qualified black candidate, the superintendent of Sacramento City Unified School District,

Rudy Crew. “For this board to snub its nose at [Crew] is a travesty and an insult,” said an

incensed Reverend Amos Brown, a prominent community leader who threatened, along

with the SFNAACP and the Pastors and Ministers Conference of San Francisco, to

organize a recall of the school board over the issue.6 Rojas committed himself to reach

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out to the various constituent groups, remarking, “If there's a community that feels

disenfranchised, then a lot of healing needs to be done.”7 Rojas eventually gained the

trust of the SFNAACP and would go on to run the district until the end of the decade.

The school board was undergoing a turnover of its own. Throughout the 1980s,

the board had been influenced by a so-called “white ladies” coalition.8 “It has come to be

viewed as racial conflict, the white members versus the minorities,” remarked

commissioner Ben Tom. “And I don’t really know how that came to be.”9 Over three

consecutive elections, between 1988 and 1992, San Francisco installed an entirely new

set of commissioners. The schools underwent “almost a wholesale change of leadership,”

recalled former commissioner Steve Phillips. “Many of us came from very political

activist and community-based backgrounds…The district [leadership] had been seen as…

much more moderate and definitely less racially diverse. So, it was a new era. New

superintendent. New board.”10

Upon approving the consent decree in May 1983, Judge William Orrick set a

period of six years during which the Court would maintain jurisdiction “to enforce its

provisions, to receive progress reports, and to enter such additional orders as may be

appropriate.”11 At any time after the six year period, parties could move the Court to

dissolve the decree. Following the settlement, the district made steady progress on three

key sections. Paragraph 12 of the consent decree compelled the district to eliminate racial

identifiability for all nine recognized subgroups.12 Paragraph 13 described the means

through which the district was to achieve this goal. Following the definition of racial

identifiability first established under Educational Redesign, every school in the district

was required to enroll students from at least four subgroups,13 no “regular” school could

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have an enrollment of more than 45 percent of any one subgroup, and certain

“alternative” schools could have no more than 40 percent of any one subgroup.14

Paragraph 14 designated nineteen schools with special enrollment caps for specific

subgroups.15 If any school exceeded the enrollment caps imposed by the Consent Decree,

the district was to restrict the entering classes so as to gradually bring it into

compliance.16

At the end of the 1984-1985 school year, the district was able to report that all

regular schools had at least four subgroups, only one regular school had a subgroup that

comprised more than 45 percent of its student body, and only two alternative schools had

a subgroup that comprised more than 40 percent of its student body.17 By the end of the

decade, however, five schools were out of compliance. For three of the schools, black

students were overrepresented; for two schools, Chinese students were overrepresented.18

The district was, for the most part, meeting its obligation to eliminate identifiability at the

classroom level as well. Of the elementary classrooms with twenty or more students, 13.1

percent did not have representation from all four subgroups. For secondary classrooms of

twenty or more students, only 5.8 percent failed to have students from at least four

subgroups.19 This degree of racial identifiability was small compared to the pre-consent

decree levels maintained by the district in the years preceding 1983 (much less the pre-

desegregation levels prior to the 1971 implementation of Horseshoe), and the district

touted its progress to the Court (see Figure 5).

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Figure 5. Racial Identifiability in SFSUD schools, 1965-1990

Source: Declaration of Donald Barfield (Exhibit, Attachments C-5 and C-7). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1228, 4/11/01).

Because of the ongoing difficulty the district faced incorporating Bayview-Hunters Point

into Educational Redesign, the consent decree prescribed special provisions meant to

increase the academic achievement of black students in the neighborhood (these

provisions are described in the previous chapter). Following pressure from advocates

including MALDEF, Latino students from the Mission District were soon included in the

plans.20 By July 1984, five schools in Bayview-Hunters Point and one school in the

Mission had been designated as “Phase I Targeted Schools.”21 These schools received

extra funding and resources (e.g., additional computers and classroom aides) and were

encouraged to develop parental involvement programs. Two Phase I schools were brand

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%19

65-1

966

1966

-196

7

1967

-196

8

1968

-196

9

1969

-197

0

1970

-197

1

1971

-197

2

1972

-197

3

1973

-197

4

1974

-197

5

1975

-197

6

1976

-197

7

1977

-197

8

1978

-197

9

1979

-198

0

1980

-198

1

1981

-198

2

1982

-198

3

1983

-198

4

1984

-198

5

1985

-198

6

1986

-198

7

1987

-198

8

1988

-198

9

1989

-199

0

Percent of SFUSD Schools with at least one racial/ethnic subgroup >45%

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new. Four were “reconstituted”—all faculty and staff positions were vacated and

applicants (some new, some rehires) were selected based on the pedagogical goals

outlined in the Decree. Over the next thirteen years, Phases II to IV of the consent decree

were implemented. During this period, the district reconstituted several schools that were

deemed perennial underperformers22 and provided extra funding available through the

Consent Decree to assist in their pursuit of improvement.23

The parties agreed that achieving the primary goal of the consent decree would

require “continued and accelerated efforts to achieve academic excellence throughout the

SFUSD.”24 At the six-year mark, at the end of the 1988-1989 term, the district pointed

cautiously to signs of academic improvement, particularly for African American and

Latino students in Phase I schools.25 Describing gains that appeared to make San

Francisco Unified the most improved urban school district in the nation, the editorial

board of the San Francisco Examiner wrote, “There is good reason for San Francisco to

look forward with pride to the beginning of another educational year.”26

In 1991, the first cohort of students assigned entirely through the system of enrollment

caps introduced under Educational Redesign and institutionalized in the consent decree

graduated from high school. Reimbursement funds flowing from Sacramento to support

desegregation activities approached $30 million annually, and the SFNAACP and

SFUSD were, by and large, working together as partners. But as the years wore on, the

conditions specified by the consent decree became increasingly untenable for many

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parents and advocates. In 1994, several Chinese American students filed suit against the

district alleging the student assignment system constituted discrimination that violated the

Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In 1999, the consent decree was

revised to eliminate the use of racial classifications in student assignment. Following a

three year period in which a default assignment plan was in place, the district began an

entirely new system, the Diversity Index, which used a set of non-race factors to

determine assignments. Fundamental understandings of public education and the rights of

its beneficiaries were impinged by various stakeholders under both the “race conscious”

and “race neutral” versions of the consent decree. These cultural characterizations

influenced political rhetoric deployed by policy makers and community advocates,

determined which alternatives were legitimate and which were not, and, in time, became

embedded in existing student assignment policy.

For the remainder of the chapter, I discuss the rise and fall of the consent decree,

and how cultural characterizations worked through community mobilization in ways that

eventually led to demands that the student assignment system be changed. As in the

earlier period of contention discussed in Part One, during this period, cultural

characterizations were structured around integration, neighborhood, and choice logics.

An integration logic was dominant. Political contention arose as the multiracial, race-

conscious framework imposed by the original version of the consent decree could no

longer be justified in some quarters. Diversity, broadly defined, took the place of

desegregation, and while racial integration remained the goal of some stakeholders,

achieving that goal required race neutral means. Choice (albeit constrained), legitimized

through Educational Redesign and the Consent Decree, became the preferred means of

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achieving diversity, and it allowed the language of diversity to permeate throughout the

district. Although a neighborhood logic persisted, overt calls for a return to a purely

neighborhood system were not regarded as credible nor realistic by most stakeholders.

But elements of neighborhood system remained as the district transitioned to the

Diversity Index.

In the courtroom, the SFNAACP, now aligned with the SFUSD, sought to

preserve the consent decree in its original form. Out in the streets, a collection of

community organizations and ad hoc groupings of parents and students fought to

influence student assignment—whether to dismantle, maintain, or strengthen the

desegregative mechanisms in place. On one side was the Chinese American Democratic

Club and its spinoff organization, the Asian American Legal Foundation, which

mobilized on behalf of Chinese American students, understood by many to be the

subgroup most adversely impacted by the 1983 settlement. Their efforts led to a 1994

lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the district’s student assignment system. Rifts

formed among advocates representing the city’s sizeable and diverse Chinese American

community. Chinese for Affirmative Action, a long-time civil rights organization, stood

prominently in staunch opposition to efforts aimed at ending the race conscious elements

of the consent decree. As they had attempted to do earlier, MALDEF and a group of

intervenors representing Latino and Asian American communities unsuccessfully

attempted to formally intervene in the case. In the end, locking out MALDEF and other

community actors while preserving SFNAACP as the sole representative for all students

in the district prevented a compromise solution from being devised.

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Ho v. SFUSD

A motion to intervene.

In the fall of 1991, Gary Orfield,27 the consent decree monitor, informed the Court that

“all parties are grateful for the long period of generally peaceful cooperation, the ability

to settle virtually all issues by negotiations, and the many new programs and additional

school resources provided under the decree.”28 But while there presently was no crisis,

the parties had raised questions on various facets of the consent decree. “[I]n a very

complex and rapidly changing city, it is not at all surprising that there should be a

continuing discussion of ways to improve on the plan,” wrote Orfield. “I know that there

were a number of elements that those who designed the plan thought could be further

developed as experience accumulated.”29 In response, Judge Orrick appointed a

committee of experts to conduct the first comprehensive review of the consent decree.

“The Decree worked well for the first eight years when it was addressing the problems

for which it was fashioned. Drastic demographic changes, however, have occurred in San

Francisco and the rest of California,” stated Orrick. “It is fair to say that as a result of

these changes parts of the Decree are obsolete and that the Decree should be reviewed in

light of the changes that have taken place.”30

Following an investigation spanning several months, the committee of experts

produced Desegregation and Educational Change in San Francisco (hereafter, “Experts’

Report”), an evaluation containing dozens of findings and recommendations.31 The

committee of experts described the decree as “possibly one of the most extensive

educational reform efforts that have been carried out in the last generation in an urban

school district.”32 But the district’s focus on Phase I schools came with a price. In

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contrast to the academic achievement gains trumpeted by the district at the onset of the

consent decree, the Experts’ Report painted a bleak picture of achievement, particularly

for black and Latino students attending Phase II, III, and IV schools.33 “Although there is

evidence of benefits from some of the programs funded under the Decree, the Experts’

Report shows there is little benefit under others and that there is very little overall change

in the situation of African American and Hispanic students in the district,” wrote

Orrick.34 Consequently, the report focused on ways to increase opportunities for black

and Latino students in Phase II, III, and IV schools so that they may “perform at or above

the level of minority students in Phase I schools.”35 Among the recommendations

presented to the Court was extending the practice of reconstitution to low-achieving

schools outside of Phase I and targeting “at least three schools each year until the task is

completed.”36 In response, the Comprehensive School Improvement Program (CSIP) was

introduced by Superintendent Rojas in 1993. The program provided discretionary

resources, increased budget flexibility, support from a central office administrator, and

access to a management consultant for low-achieving schools. CSIP evaluations would be

the means by which the district determined which schools would be reconstituted and

which schools would be spared.37 But beyond CSIP, the district suggested no significant

changes in response to the Experts’ Report, even while acknowledging the changing

racial demographics of the student population.38

During the second half of 1992, as the court and the district were considering the

findings and recommendations of the Experts’ Report, an advocate-led mobilization

effort on behalf of language minorities emerged.39 The certification of SFNAACP as

class representative of all students in the district, rather than just African American

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students, had always been a source of contention, and many advocates expressed doubt

that an organization predominantly concerned with black civil rights could adequately

represent Latino and Asian subgroups.40 The Experts’ Report provided an opportunity to

once again address the issue. The Latin American Teachers’ Association (LATA)

recruited Multicultural Education, Training, and Advocacy (META), a language rights

advocacy organization, to represent pro bono a coalition of stakeholders seeking to

formally intervene in the lawsuit.41 The coalition of intervenors included respected

community organizations Mujeres Unidas y Activas/Coalition for Immigrant and

Refugee Rights and Services, Alianza, Padres Unidos en Contra de la Violencia, and

Chinese for Affirmative Action. “Through this intervention, the applicants seek to ensure

that the needs of the largest ethnic/racial groups in the San Francisco Unified School

District are adequately addressed through the Decree,” wrote Deborah Escobedo and

Irma Herrera, attorneys at META.42

By early 1993, intervenors presented the court with a range of issues important to

San Francisco’s Latino community. Neither the district nor the SFNAACP had a solution

to the stagnant standardized test scores and shamefully high drop-out rate among Latino

students, they argued. The district needed to provide “positive activities” for Latino

youth. “At-risk” students who were limited English proficient were underserved because

of the district’s lack of qualified bilingual educators teaching in alternative high

schools.43 Administrative concerns were also raised. For instance, the district’s need to

verify residency delayed or discouraged undocumented parents from participating in the

student assignment process.44 Most school district enrollment forms were only printed in

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English and outreach conducted in Spanish on the Optional Enrollment Request (OER)

process had been lacking, further excluding many Latino parents.45

META’s motion to intervene was also brought in the interest of Chinese

American students, a subgroup that, according to the Experts’ Report, maintained “a

strong record of academic achievement.”46 This troubled advocates who understood the

ramifications of the “model minority” label frequently applied to Asian American

students. META directed the Court’s attention to the Report’s lack of recommendations

for Asian American students:

[T]he issues are more complex… While the applicants for intervention do not

dispute the fact that a substantial percentage of Asian students in the District are

performing well academically, it is shortsighted to ignore those Asian students

who are not achieving academic parity. This approach fosters an ethnic stereotype

of Asian Americans as the “model minority” who, unlike other racial and ethnic

groups, can overcome ethnic and racial barriers without any assistance. As a

result, assistance is not made available to many Asian students who are in dire

need, especially newly arrived immigrants and those who are low-income.47

To assist with this aspect of META’s motion to intervene, Escobedo and Herrera

partnered with Henry Der, the executive director of Chinese for Affirmative Action

(CAA).48 “[Chinese] parents feel that they do not have a voice in influencing educational

policies and Consent Decree-funded programs,” said Der. “[CAA believes] that by

intervening… we can ensure that the unique needs of the Chinese and Asian communities

of San Francisco are adequately addressed.”49

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The proposed intervenors were in a difficult position. While they supported the

consent decree’s goals and the means put in place to achieve them, they were seeking to

formally intervene in the lawsuit, thus exposing a rift among a local community of

advocates that typically had been aligned on civil rights issues. Noting that no assertion

had been made that the consent decree was unlawful or otherwise impermissible, the

district, at the behest of its board of education, opposed META’s motion to intervene.50

The consent decree was the remedy settling all prior allegations of intentional segregatory

acts. The district argued that if the META intervenors intended to allege new or different

segregatory acts, an entirely new complaint was warranted. The school board opposed the

motion on a split vote; four board members opposed META’s motion to intervene while

three board members felt that doing so would be an opportunity to bring in more

community input into the process. “Multi-racial cooperation is most effectively built

when all minority groups are equally empowered to share in decision making. When only

one community group… is asked to speak for all Asian American, Latino and African

American communities, the other communities are disenfranchised,” declared

commissioner Fa in support of META’s motion. “In situations like the SFUSD where

there are three major minority groups… each group should be given an equal voice in

anything as important as the Consent Decree.”51 Striking a more strident tone was

Commissioner Yee. “The consent decree was not intended to serve only African

American and Latino students, but all children in San Francisco,” wrote Yee in a letter to

the head of the district’s Integration Department. “However, the neglect of other students,

such as Asian Americans, was intentional. It was deliberate and planned. Few individuals

would argue that the Chinese have paid a heavy cost in this integration consent decree.

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They have been adversely impacted because their high numbers have prevented them

from entering schools of their choice in the school district.”52

Following its initial decision to oppose META’s intervention, in the face of strong

community opposition, two board members reconsidered their stance. “Integration is not

a Black/White issue in this City,” observed commissioner Tom Ammiano. “Under

painful re-examination of the case made for intervention by the Chinese and Latino

communities and in speaking to members of the African American community who

support the intervention of those represented by META, it is my opinion that the needs of

all students are better met by their intervention.”53 Commissioner Steve Phillips learned

soon after his initial vote that it had been perceived as inconsistent with his efforts to

“involve racial/ethnic coalitions of parents and groups at the…decision making table.”54

Phillips declared that upon reflection he realized that he had not made the connection

between his legal position to oppose intervention and the limitation of parents and

“groups such as Alianza and Mujeres Unidas to have meaningful and formal input into

the development and implementation” of the consent decree.55 Meeting in an executive

session on April 15, 1993, the board voted to instruct counsel to support META’s

intervention.56

The argument to intervene laid out by META was similar to MALDEF’s from a

decade earlier—without the formal participation of Latino and Asian parents and

advocates, the needs of this increasingly sizeable community will continue to go unmet.57

Binding the intervenors together was the perceived lack of linguistic and cultural

competence on the part of the SFNAACP. “My interest is not adequately represented by

the present plaintiffs in this action,” declared public school parent Sui-Ming Wan. “The

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educational neglect suffered by my children and other Asian and immigrant students is in

many ways similar to the historical abuse experienced by African American children, but

the needs of my children also differ as a result of differences in language and culture.”58

While limited English proficient students were as much members of the class as black

students were, META noted that the parties appeared reluctant to tackle the issue of their

academic achievement: “They quickly dismiss the educational needs of these class

members by sweeping their needs under the ever-expanding Lau rug.”59

While conceding that the SFNAACP had not only refused to incorporate META’s

suggestions but that it also lacked expertise in the area of bilingual education, Judge

Orrick reiterated that:

Bilingual education is the subject matter of Lau, not of this case. The subject

matter of this case, the desegregation of the schools with respect to all races, is an

interest the NAACP shares with the proposed student and parent intervenors. The

achievement of the goal of improved educational performance is also shared by

both these intervenors and the NAACP. 60

Intervention by META was therefore not appropriate, by Orrick’s estimation, particularly

since there had been no serious attempt to criticize the SFNAACP’s representation to

date.61 “The NAACP is certainly capable of representing the interests of non-African

American school children,” wrote Orrick. “It assumed the responsibility at the start of

this litigation and… insists that it is capable of doing so in the future as well.”62 While

denying the motion, as a consolation of sorts, the Court did decide to grant Amicus

Curiae status to the community organizations and parents involved in META’s

intervention, creating what was termed the “Latino Group” and the “Asian Group.”63

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Underlying the growing dissatisfaction with the consent decree and SFNAACP’s

role as class representative was a student population that had undergone sweeping

demographic changes. In the years since Superintendent Alioto first introduced

Educational Redesign, the continued influx of Latino and Asian immigrants to the district

and loss of white and black students to private schools and public schools outside of the

district reshaped the student population. In 1978, African American and white students

together made up just over one half of the district’s enrollment, while Latino and Chinese

students comprised nearly one third of the district’s enrollment. When the consent decree

took effect, in the fall of 1983, the combined enrollment of African American and white

students had fallen to under 40 percent and the combined enrollment of Latino and

Chinese students was just over 37 percent. By the 1992 school year, African American

and white students made up just 33 percent of the district while Latino and Chinese

students were over 44 percent of the district (see Table 14). The Experts’ Report

suggested that the city’s demographic trends might actually work to facilitate school

desegregation:

The District is not experiencing the kind of rapidly growing proportion of

segregated African American and Hispanic students so common in other large

central cities. Nor is there a major drop in the proportion of students from the

more educationally successful groups in the city schools; the largest growth came

among Chinese students, a group with a strong record of academic achievement.

Nor is residential segregation expanding. In fact, some of the historically

segregated areas, including Hunter’s Point, have experienced significant growth

of residential desegregation. The demographic trends suggest that it may be

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possible to maintain educationally beneficial school desegregation while

gradually reducing mandatory busing.64

However, the Report failed to anticipate how these trends down the line would impinge

on the student assignment system as constructed by Educational Redesign and the

consent decree. The racial balance threshold under Horseshoe and Operation Integrate

was dependent on subgroup population relative to total student population. In contrast,

Educational Redesign and the consent decree set the racial balance threshold at 40 or 45

percent of a school’s population, regardless of subgroup. When Orrick approved the

consent decree settlement, blacks were the largest subgroup and the cap often served to

prevent racially isolated black schools. But within a few years, this had changed.

The demographic transformation of the city meant that school attendance

boundaries drawn to maintain racial balance could no longer do so (see Table 15).

Chinese students living in the city’s western and northern neighborhoods endured the

greatest impact.65 The district was forced to raise the prospect of an expanded busing

system to comply with the court mandate, but the growth of the Chinese population was

so extensive that even the schools that were designated to handle overflow students were

themselves reaching the court-imposed limit.66 “If the Chinese students are dominant

here… you can’t take them from one school and move them to the other, because it

doesn’t do anything,” remarked then-Superintendent Carlos Cornejo. “It isn’t as easy as it

appears.”67 Requesting the court grant an exception to the racial balance threshold was an

alternative, but it was a nonstarter for the NAACP. “We’re not going over 45 percent,”

said chapter president Lulann McGriff. “They need to come up with a plan. Until they do

that, we’re not going to entertain increasing another percentage point.”68 Redrawing

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attendance boundaries would similarly be politically difficult, upsetting those parents

with children assigned to a less preferable school than they would have been assigned to

with the boundaries already in place.

Table 14. SFUSD student population by subgroup (percent), 1977-1992

School Year TOTAL L OW AA C J K AI F ONW

1977-78 63,872 14.3 22.1 28.6 18.1 1.5 1.0 0.6 8.8 5.0

1978-79 60,113 15.3 20.1 27.6 18.8 1.5 1.1 0.6 8.8 5.3

1979-80 56,862 15.8 19.4 26.6 18.9 1.4 1.1 0.6 9.0 7.2

1980-81 57,433 16.0 18.0 25.7 19.7 1.3 1.0 0.6 8.6 9.8

1981-82 59,086 16.7 17.4 23.8 19.3 1.2 1.0 0.6 8.5 11.5

1982-83 60,476 17.3 17.0 23.2 19.2 1.1 1.0 0.6 8.7 11.8

1983-84 61,369 17.3 17.0 22.5 19.9 1.1 1.1 0.6 8.7 11.9

1984-85 63,215 17.4 16.7 21.9 20.8 1.1 1.1 0.6 8.6 11.9

1985-86 64,164 17.8 16.1 21.0 21.5 1.0 1.2 0.6 8.9 12.1

1986-87 64,500 18.3 15.4 20.4 21.9 1.0 1.2 0.6 8.9 12.2

1987-88 64,263 18.2 14.8 20.0 23.0 1.0 1.3 0.6 9.0 12.2

1988-89 63,390 18.7 14.7 19.4 23.2 1.0 1.2 0.6 8.8 12.4

1989-90 62,780 19.3 14.5 18.9 23.7 1.0 1.2 0.7 8.3 12.5

1990-91 63,506 19.7 14.3 18.9 23.7 1.0 1.1 0.6 8.1 12.5

1991-92 63,806 19.6 14.3 18.7 24.3 1.0 1.1 0.6 8.1 12.2

Source: San Francisco Unified School District, Research, Planning, and Accountability Department

N.B. (L)atino, (O)ther (W)hite, (A)frican (A)merican, (C)hinese, (J)apanese, (K)orean, (A)merican (I)ndian, (F)ilipino, (O)ther (N)on-(W)hite. Note the decline in the percentage of white and African American students and the increase in the percentage of Latino and Chinese students.

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Table 15. Schools impacted by enrollment caps, March 1993

Race Schools within 6 points of cap

Percent of total schools

Percent of impacted schools

Chinese 30 0.28 0.44 African American 14 0.13 0.20 Spanish Speaking 21 0.19 0.31 All other subgroups 4 0.04 0.05

Total 69 0.64 1.00

Source: Declaration by Amado Cabezas on behalf of Chinese American Democratic Club. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF751, 4/22/93). Cabezas obtained data from SFUSD Planning and Research Department.

The Fiery Dragon

“I believe that the highest priority is for the Chinese community to get into the game. The

deal over integration cannot be left to the NAACP.” These were the words of Leslie Yee,

an officer of the Chinese American Democratic Club (CADC), writing to club president

Roland Quan in the fall of 1988.69 A few weeks prior, Carlos Cornejo (at the time, the

district’s integration officer under Superintendent Ramon Cortines) had circulated a

proposal to district principals calling for the lowering of the racial subgroup cap at all

schools, including Lowell High School from 45 to 40 percent.70 If implemented, the plan

would negatively impact Chinese students, a subgroup that constituted 43 percent of

Lowell’s student population. (Cornejo’s proposal would also requiring reassigning

Chinese students from Galileo, Lincoln, and Washington high schools.) Cortines had

previously stated that the schools must be “reflective of all the city’s kids” in reference to

concerns from parents regarding the racial demographics at Lowell (see Table 16).

Alternative schools like Lowell are fine, “but not necessarily at the expense of other

schools”71

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Table 16. Lowell High School Student Enrollment, 1986

Lowell High School Districtwide +/- Chinese 0.43 0.22 +0.21 Other White 0.24 0.16 +0.08 Filipino 0.08 0.09 -0.01 Hispanic 0.07 0.18 -0.11 Black 0.06 0.21 -0.15 Korean 0.03 0.01 +0.02 Japanese 0.03 0.01 +0.02 Other 0.05 0.12 -0.07

Source: Diane Curtis, “Top-Rated Lowell a Pressure Cooker.” San Francisco Chronicle, June 11, 1986.

Lowell was (and is) the city’s premier academic high school.72 It found itself caught

between two institutions. As an SFUSD school, the provisions of the consent decree were

enforced. But unlike other schools in the district, students weren’t assigned to Lowell,

they were required to apply for admission. Applicants were ranked based on a scale score

that combined CTBS test results with seventh and eighth grade performance. Cornejo’s

proposal would impose a cutoff score for Chinese students that was higher than the cutoff

score for other racial subgroups in order to maintain Lowell’s Chinese population within

the 40 percent cap. While adhering to the consent decree’s requirement to enroll a

minimum of four subgroups was easy for a school with a population of well over 2,000

students, limiting Chinese students who would otherwise qualify based on academic

performance because their subgroup had reached the specified limit was politically

fraught. The San Francisco Chronicle referred to the proposal as “a new Chinese

Exclusion Act.”73 Leland Yee, at the time a CADC-backed candidate for school board,

condemned the plan as “especially unfair to those Chinese American students who have

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excelled in their studies only to learn that because of their ethnic background, they cannot

enter Lowell High School.”74

The CADC was founded in 1958. In its early years, the club focused solely on

supporting Democratic candidates and issues. By the late 1970s, it had achieved success

with the political appointment and election of several CADC members and friends.75

While these efforts continued, some members became “increasingly concerned about

maintaining the political support of the larger community” and began working on issues

of civil rights and empowerment to strengthen the organization’s bonds with its

community base.76 The impact of the consent decree on Chinese American students

presented itself as an issue that CADC might build a campaign around. But it wasn’t at

all clear what CADC’s response should be. Roland Quan had called on the

Superintendent to “clear the air” by bringing the proposal to the board of education for a

public discussion.77 Leslie Yee was now encouraging a much more proactive

participation by the club. Members weighed the political cost of confronting the consent

decree against any potential benefits that might have been gained. Louis Hop Lee, a

longtime CADC officer, was among a handful of members who, from the very beginning,

strongly advocated involvement in the issue. “I clearly remember making many an

impassioned argument over many months and at many meetings to get the majority of

CADC to endorse taking a formal position and providing political and other support,” he

recalled. “Eventually they did, but it took maybe six to nine months and even then all

throughout the support was mostly tepid.”78

Early on, CADC members specifically focused on the disadvantaged position

Chinese students were placed in with regard to white students. “There is both a negative

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impact and a negative purpose,” wrote Leslie Yee. “The schools are being pressured by

whites to open up prestigious high schools for whites. Whites send their kids to private

schools and then if they can get into Lowell or Wallenberg, they go there. If they can’t

get in, they stay in the private schools. This is purposeful discrimination. Kicking

Chinese out to make room for whites.”79 Among the solutions bandied about was to

maintain the cap for just white students, and to instead focus on enrolling minimum

numbers of underrepresented subgroups. “No maximum limit on minority admissions

should be applied at Lowell because of special admission criteria, mainly test scores and

grades” was an argument circulated by CADC.80 However, “ethnic representation to

achieve diversity in the student body at Lowell is desirable. Black and Hispanic

representation at Lowell is extremely low and should be increased”81 A campaign was

taking shape at the CADC.

During this time, Chinese for Affirmative Action (CAA), an organization founded

in 1969 to promote equal opportunity in education and employment, had also been

investigating the impact of the consent decree on Chinese American students. In 1987,

CAA was involved in the formation of the Chinese American Parents Association, a

group created to encourage parental participation and involvement in the public school

system. A key issue for members was the enrollment cap, particularly as it pertained to

admission into Lowell. Parents worked to encourage the district establish additional

academically competitive schools to handle the demand, enlisting the support of school

board member Ben Tom and The Association of Chinese Teachers (TACT). Chinese

students “have studied hard and taken the test to qualify,” remarked executive director

Henry Der. “That shows how much further this school district has to go.”82 By June 1991,

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the CAA board voted to oppose the higher cut-off scores imposed on Chinese applicants

(while supporting “affirmative action efforts to increase the representation of African

American and Hispanic students at Lowell”).83 As an alternative, CAA pushed the school

district to instead establish a pool of diverse applicants and admit students by lottery.

In 1991, in order to maintain compliance with the consent decree, the cut-off

score for Chinese applicants to Lowell was set at 59 out of 69 possible points. For black,

Native American, and Latino students, the cut-off was 54. For all other subgroups,

including white students, the cut-off score was 57. (A two point difference on this scale

was equivalent to a letter grade difference in one 8th grade class.)84 Two years later, in

1993, Chinese applicants were required to score a near perfect 66 points, while the cut-off

score was 56 for black and Latino students and 59 for all other subgroups. As the

difference in cut-off scores across subgroups increased, the admissions process at Lowell

became the lightning rod of the consent decree. It was hard to defend and it struck some

people as very unfair, recalled commissioner Steve Phillips. People felt that “if you test

better than any other students, you should be able to get in, period. You shouldn’t have to

get a higher test score number.”85

Admissions at Lowell was incorporated into META’s motion for intervention.

“We see no rational reason why Chinese students should be differentially treated with

respect to admissions standards at Lowell High School,” argued META attorneys

Escobedo and Herrera. “To maintain the status quo only serves to penalize an ethnic

minority community which has long been victimized by ethnic and racial discrimination

and harassment in this city and throughout California.”86 Chinese parents “feel that they

do not have a voice in influencing educational policies and Consent Decree-funded

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programs in San Francisco. Many Chinese parents have expressed to our organization

their dissatisfaction about higher academic requirements imposed on Chinese student

applicants, seeking admission to Lowell High School,” declared Henry Der in the motion.

“Chinese parents have often requested Chinese for Affirmative Action to intervene on

their behalf so that school officials understand their concerns.” 87 The alternative

advocated by CAA was to have only two cutoff scores, one for African American and

Latino students and another for all other subgroups, and then to hold a random lottery that

would admit students in such a way that would maintain the enrollment caps.88

By 1993, CADC’s position had sharpened considerably. Its initial objective was

to convince the school board to end the consent decree. To build public support, CADC

“hit all the bases, personally talking to all important elected officials, political groups, the

media, the school board, community leaders, Chinese American groups, everyone who

was anyone,” recalls Louis Hop Lee, then a CADC board member.89 CADC members

spoke with over seventy students and organized parents to attend school board meeting

en masse.90 For former school board commissioner Steve Phillips, several things stood

out:

One is the mass mobilization of the school board meetings. Then they did have

individual meetings where they would have a team of people to meet with [board]

members, try to lobby this around, making the case for their situation. It became a

litmus test issue: Would you get the endorsement of CADC? They would try to

impact any other endorsements that they could, to make it something that was on

the minds of candidates running for office.91

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In February, the CADC membership voted on a resolution calling on the board of

education to terminate the portion of the consent decree that imposed enrollment caps and

instead institute a system requiring minimum subgroup enrollment across schools in

order to achieve integration.92 This was followed up with brief of objections to the

fairness of the consent decree filed with the court.93 But these efforts did not carry them

far. By and large, the response CADC received was that school integration generally, and

the consent decree in particular, were not to be touched.94

By April, CADC had announced the formation of a consent decree task force

whose objective was to “provide equity for Chinese American students, to enhance

educational opportunities for under-achieving students of all ethnicities, and to promote

quality education for all students.”95 Addressing admissions at Lowell remained a focal

point, and the task force demanded that the cut-off score for Chinese students be the same

as it was for white students. All the while, the task force remained supportive of efforts to

maintain or increase the number of black and Latino students at Lowell and to augment

educational opportunities to underachieving minority students districtwide.96 “CADC’s

position is very simple,” declared the Fiery Dragon News, its monthly newsletter.

“Individual students should not be denied admission to Lowell, or any other public

school, on the basis of race.”97 Despite concern from Lowell’s principal and PTA that the

school was already over-crowded, CADC’s appeals convinced Superintendent Waldemar

“Bill” Rojas to lower the cut-off score for Chinese students to 61 in the spring of 1993

(still two points higher than the cut-off for white students). The move allowed an

additional 153 Chinese students to enter Lowell the upcoming fall. But it also meant that

additional non-Chinese students would need to be admitted in order to comply with the

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consent decree’s enrollment cap requirement. “We won’t be satisfied until we see

whether he has allowed the other students in,” cautioned NAACP president Lulann

McGriff.

Both CADC and CAA opposed the maintenance of higher cut-off scores for

Chinese American students. But CAA disagreed with the argument that the enrollment

caps were discriminatory toward Chinese students. The starkly different alternatives the

two organizations advocated for was indicative of a Chinese American community

divided on the issue of school integration. A political rift formed, perceived by some to

break along class lines, that deepened as CADC’s campaign grew increasingly effective

and prominent in the years to follow. In comments exposing the schism to the broader

public, Henry Der dismissed CADC’s complaints as little more than “middle class

angst.”98 Middle class Chinese parents were benefiting from the system, Der argued.

“What they [i.e., CADC members] say is racially divisive and is not very progressive at

all. They want basically single-race schools.”99 The comments infuriated CADC

members. “We are extremely disturbed that [Der] blames children and parents for the

discrimination they suffer,” proclaimed a CADC press release. “Blaming the victim only

fuels racial prejudice.”100 A series of meetings and an exchange of letters meant to clear

the air between the two organizations took place thereafter. “Your characterization of our

position is unfair, it is irresponsible, it is inflammatory, and it is untrue.” wrote CADC

president Samson Wong. “We request a statement from yourself and your Board of

Directors retracting your allegations.” 101 But tension between the two groups over the

consent decree remained and would dim relations for years to come.102

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Up to this point, while some within CADC supported the dissolution of the

consent decree in its entirety, the organization’s public stance—to its members, the

school district, the court, and the general public—was nuanced. CADC recognized the

value of affirmative measures to increase diversity in schools (and the workplace). Race

conscious efforts that afforded a preference to black and Latino students were acceptable.

What was offensive was that white students were admitted to Lowell with lower scores

than Chinese students, a protected group. “At Lowell High School, Chinese American

students bear the only burden of desegregation as defined by the Consent Decree,” stated

Louis Hop Lee and Juliet Gee.103 This stance aligned with past CADC campaigns that

sought affirmative action in, for example, contracting for city services and hiring in the

school district. Such was where things stood by the summer of 1993. Within a year,

however, as a new strategy surfaced and the pace of the campaign quickened, this

position of CADC became vulnerable.

“David and Goliath”104

Over the spring and summer, the district tried to recruit new black and Latino students to

Lowell as a means of offsetting the Superintendent’s decision to admit 153 additional

Chinese American students. They were only partially successful. At the start of the 1993-

1994 school year, the Chinese subgroup comprised 42.9 percent of the school, just over

the 40 percent limit for alternative schools. From the very start, the SFNAACP carried

out the role of consent decree watchdog. Primarily due to the tenacity of chapter

president Lulann McGriff and attorney Peter Cohn, district leaders and school board

members were forced to remain “mindful of the consent decree and the goals attached to

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it” on a constant basis.105 As would be expected, the possibility of starting the school year

with Lowell out of compliance generated an angry reaction from the SFNAACP, which

vowed that the district would not be given a “pass” on the issue.106

With pressure to resolve the Lowell issue mounting, Superintendent Rojas

convened a 21-member panel composed of Lowell parents, teachers, students, and alums

as well as community advocates, including representatives from SFNAACP, CADC and

CAA, to advise the district on Lowell’s yet-to-be-determined admissions policy for the

following school year.107 The CADC consent decree task force submitted

recommendations to the panel that sought to lower the percentage of Chinese students at

Lowell by redoubling district recruitment and retention efforts for black, Latino, and

white students. But a central concern for CADC remained the effect of the 40 percent

enrollment cap on qualified Chinese applicants. The group proposed creating a secondary

pool of applicants to be admitted through a “race-blind merit-based” process and

revisiting the consent decree “with a view of adapting the racial guidelines to changing

demographics.”108 The SFNAACP, however, regarded the maintenance of enrollment

caps as nonnegotiable.109

It became increasingly clear to CADC that a new tactic was required. Talk shifted

to mounting a legal assault on the consent decree.110 “After exhausting political remedies

for two years, we finally turned to lawyers,” stated Amy Chang.111 The idea of a lawsuit

was not new. Years earlier, Leslie Yee called for a lawsuit, declaring that “some Chinese

organization, for example, CADC, must sue the school board to get into the game.”112

The idea had been batted around since then. But up to this point, a lawsuit was always a

“‘Plan B’ because of the expense and uncertainty” of such a campaign.113 In search of

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expertise, the CADC task force organized a legal luncheon in early December for

“partner-level Chinese Americans” 114 at prominent San Francisco law firms, as well as

attorneys from public interest firms, including Asian Law Caucus and American Civil

Liberties Union.115

A week or two prior to the luncheon, Daniel Girard and Anthony Lee, colleagues

at a well-known class action law firm, were flying back from a trip to Texas. Their

conversation turned to the use of race in student assignment. Lee’s wife had brought up

the issue to him, having learned about the consent decree through her friend, Amy Chang.

“Somebody should bring that legal challenge,” mentioned Girard. When Lee heard about

the luncheon, he invited Girard to attend. The luncheon “was a very memorable thing

because, I remember, there were a number of lawyers in there from big firms, and I think

everybody had a sense this case was going to be a very, very high-profile case that would

attract a lot of attention,” recalls Girard. “These lawyers were saying they could sort of

help out but not really do it because they might get in trouble with their firms, and that it

was viewed as a very politically unpopular case that was going to draw down a lot of

pressure from powerful people in the community.”116 At the luncheon was David Levine,

a professor at U.C. Hastings College of Law with expertise in federal civil procedure and

institutional reform. Girard hadn’t known Levine, but he immediately recognized him as

“a guy who could make the difference” as a complement to Girard’s class action

expertise.

Following the luncheon, Girard attended several follow-up meetings sponsored by

CADC in which parents would discuss their frustrations with the student assignment

system. It was a powerful experience for him: “Sometimes there were parents who had

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been here for several generations, other times they were recent immigrant parents, but

everybody’s common sense was that this was contrary to the basic fabric of what it is to

be American, that you couldn’t have people discriminating against you based on your

ethnicity or your race.” Girard arranged to have a group of parents speak to partners at his

firm. Although the consensus from Girard’s colleagues was that a case challenging the

consent decree had merit, they were upset when Girard agreed to represent the parents.

“The phrase that I remember,” said Girard, “Is: it’s going to offend powerful people in

the community that we can’t afford to offend.” Shortly thereafter Girard was counseled to

leave the firm, in part due to his work on the consent decree case. He left to start his own

firm. But he kept the case and enlisted Levine and Lee. Together, the three comprised the

core legal team that would work for the next eight years on the consent decree challenge.

By spring 1994, the search for plaintiffs was well underway.117 CADC put out a citywide

call for students “turned down by Lowell because of the higher education standards for

Chinese applicants” as well as students turned down by other schools because of his or

her Chinese ancestry.118 But internally, the possibility of a lawsuit placed a strain on

CADC’s membership. Although the organization as a whole endorsed the consent decree

campaign, “it was still pretty obvious that there were elements within CADC that were

very resistant to rocking the boat and trying to pursue the remedies that we [i.e., the

CADC Consent Decree Task Force] thought were right,” said Lee Cheng.119 Echoing this

sentiment, Henry Louie recalled that in fact, “there were a number of people within

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CADC who felt that the consent decree was necessary to desegregate.”120 To resolve the

issue, CADC spun off the task force into a separate organization, the Asian American

Legal Foundation (AALF). The two organizations remained very closely aligned

throughout the duration of the lawsuit, with AALF existing as a vehicle to channel

donations and structure the political and community aspects of the consent decree

campaign apart from CADC.121 With regard to the lawsuit, a “double prong” approach

was developed: while Girard, Levine, and Lee would handle the case proper, AALF

would focus on the political and community aspects of the campaign.122

By the summer, three class representatives with compelling stories had been

recruited: Because of the enrollment cap, five-year old Brian Ho was unable to attend

schools in the Sunset District, the west-side neighborhood where he lived. Similarly,

Hilary Chen, aged eight, was denied a transfer from her former school to a school in the

Sunset District where her family had recently moved. A third student, Patrick Wong, was

denied admission to Lowell because his combined index score fell below the cut-off for

the Chinese subgroup. However, the score was high enough to gain admission for every

other recognized subgroup. The three students (collectively, “Ho”), represented by lead

attorney Girard, sued the SFUSD on July 11, 1994 alleging that the district, by assigning

students based on its system of racial classifications and enrollment caps, violated the

Fourteenth Amendment.123 The students sought declaratory relief and an injunction on

the unconstitutional portion of the student assignment system. “After exhausting all

attempts to effect satisfactory reform within the established political system,” read the

statement released by CADC. “The plaintiffs are turning to the judiciary to protect our

Constitutionally guaranteed rights to be free from discrimination.”124

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Understandably, there was considerable interest from within San Francisco’s

Chinese American community in the run-up and immediate aftermath of the lawsuit. “It

is reasonable that Asian parents in San Francisco are against ethnic quotas,” began a

typical sentiment expressed in the local Chinese media. “Schools should open their doors

to all students regardless of students' racial groups, and enroll students with equity.”125

But the assignment system did enroll students equitably, argued SFNAACP attorney

Peter Cohn. “The desegregation plan assures that no school will ever again become a

one-race school. It affirmatively opens the door of opportunity to all San Francisco

school children.” 126 Aubrey McCutcheon, the school district’s lawyer agreed. “There

have been African American students turned away from schools because they’re African

American, and some because they’re Latino. No student is guaranteed to attend any

particular school.”127

William Orrick, by now semi-retired, was assigned the case.128 Early on, the local

and state defendants were confident the student assignment system was safe. “It’s going

to be more than an uphill battle to topple” the consent decree, remarked Barry Zolotar,

the state’s lawyer. But as the case progressed, it quickly become clear to the parties

involved that the district’s use of racial classification would in fact put the assignment

system in jeopardy. The next fifteen months were occupied primarily by the defendants’

motion that the case should be dismissed because the issues brought up in Ho had been

decided in 1983. The motion was denied since conditions had changed since the consent

decree was approved” and Ho plaintiffs, unlike the SFNAACP, “intend to focus on the

operation and effects of the consent decree, and not whether the [school district] is

segregated.”129 This was followed by the certification of plaintiffs as class representatives

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for “all children of Chinese descent of school age who are current residents of San

Francisco and who are eligible to attend the public schools of the San Francisco Unified

School District.”130 However, in the earlier lawsuit, the SFNAACP was still the certified

class representative “of all the school children, heretofore, now or hereafter eligible to

attend the public elementary and secondary schools of the SFUSD,” including, of course,

children of Chinese descent.131 It was left unclear to what extent the SFNAACP was no

longer representing Chinese American students.132

The new guidelines for Lowell High School were finally approved for the fall

1996 incoming class. All applicants whose combined score was 63 or higher were

guaranteed admission. This would account for seventy to eighty percent of an entering

class. To fill the remaining twenty to thirty percent of an entering class, some students

who scored just below 63 were admitted on a “value-added” basis. For this group, a

selection committee took into account elements such as leadership, coursework, artistic

talent, and family need. The guidelines required Lowell’s selection committee to also

give special consideration to underrepresented applicants “recognizing the historical

racial discrimination against these communities” and the need to comply with the consent

decree.133 This led the superintendent to admit all black, Latino, and African American

applicants who scored above 50 points.134 Although the plan was celebrated by the

selection committee chair as providing “equity at last” and is essentially what CADC had

asked prior to filing the lawsuit, it was viewed differently by the Ho plaintiffs. “It’s still

race conscious and it’s still illegal,” declaimed Girard, who vowed to move forward with

the case.

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Earlier in the summer, Girard filed a motion for summary judgment on the

grounds that the district’s student assignment system did not meet contemporary

constitutional standards and that there was “no factual dispute as to the SFUSD’s use of

racial criteria” in its student assignment system.”135 The following year, on May 5, 1997,

Orrick denied the motion.136 In his ruling, Orrick determined that Ho plaintiffs were

bound to the 1983 court order because the SFNAACP had been certified as class

representative for all students. However, Orrick agreed with Ho that SFUSD students

were subject to race-based classifications by a state actor. (This came despite testimony

from Superintendent Rojas that he had “not assigned or authorized the assignment of

students to schools in San Francisco based on their race or ethnicity.”)137 But the core

issue—whether the assignment plan at present was constitutional—was one that Ho had

failed to show and would require a trial.138 “Any time a single child is denied an

opportunity to pursue educational opportunities due to their ethnicity is wrong,” said

Amy Chang after the ruling. But "without it, we'd be back in the 1950s, when the schools

for black children in San Francisco were at the bottom rung of the ladder," remarked

Alex Pitcher, president of the SFNAACP. Orrick recognized that while SFNAACP and

Ho had come to different conclusions on the consent decree, they both are working on

behalf of “the same right—the right of children to attend public school free from

invidious discrimination.”139 Ho appealed in what would mark a critical turning point in

San Francisco’s student assignment system.

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Desegregation and Affirmative Action Jurisprudence

Following Keyes, judicial conservatism gradually led to a more restrained application of

court-mandated desegregation. In 1974, the Supreme Court disallowed an inter-district

“metropolitan” plan that sought to desegregate the Detroit public school system and

counteract white flight by busing students from dozens of outlying suburban school

districts.140 While the Detroit Board of Education was found to have engaged in

segregatory acts, there had been no such finding on the part of the suburban districts. The

Court’s ruling limited desegregation remedies, including the busing prescribed in Swann,

to just those districts that had committed constitutional violations, even if what results is

an essentially black central-city school system surrounded by essentially white suburban

school districts, as was the case in Detroit.141 In clarifying the limits of school districts,

the Court reminded the respondents that “desegregation, in the sense of dismantling a

dual school system does not require any particular racial balance” across schools, grades,

or classrooms.142 Judicial oversight was not meant to remain in perpetuity. By the early

1990s, the Court set about providing guidance on determining the point at which school

districts should be released from supervision.143 A three-part test was developed.144 If (1)

a school district adequately complied with its desegregation mandate, (2) judicial control

was no longer necessary to achieve compliance, and (3) it could be shown that a good

faith effort to eliminate “the vestiges of past discrimination” to “the extent practicable,”

school districts could be classified as unitary.145

Relying heavily on these rulings, the Court cast doubt on a desegregation plan

developed for the Kansas City, Missouri School District (KCMSD).146 In addition to

redistributing students within KCMSD, the district court’s remedy involved a

comprehensive program of capital, instructional, and curricular improvements designed

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to attract white students from outside of the district. This was an inter-district goal, wrote

Chief Justice Rehnquist in delivering the opinion of the Court. “In effect, the District

Court has devised a remedy to accomplish indirectly what it admittedly lacks the

remedial authority to mandate directly: the interdistrict transfer of students.” Also at issue

was the duration of the court’s involvement with the school district. “Sixteen years after

this litigation began, the District Court recognized that the KCMSD has yet to offer a

viable method of financing the ‘wonderful school system being built,’” stated Rehnquist

in reminding the district court that its end purpose included returning control of the

school system to state and local authorities. It was a sharply divided ruling. The

dissenters147 disagreed with the majority’s opinion that the courts had no authority to

mandate improvements that might in fact help recruit new students. “Today, the Court

declares illegitimate the goal of attracting nonminority students to the…District,” wrote

Justice Ginsberg in her dissent. “Given the deep, inglorious history of segregation in

Missouri, to curtail desegregation at this time and in this manner is an action at once too

swift and too soon.”

Like KCMSD, San Francisco’s plan combined desegregation with a concerted

effort to improve academic achievement. The Supreme Court’s ruling strengthened an

argument by the Ho plaintiffs that California should be freed from permanently funding

the consent decree, particularly given the indeterminable effect the hundreds of millions

of dollars had had on increasing academic achievement.148 (Orrick’s order refusing to

dismiss the Ho case came on the heels of the Supreme Court ruling.) The San Francisco

Chronicle editorialized that with this ruling, the Rehnquist court “took a lurching step

backward in reversing school desegregation efforts.” Foretelling the future direction of

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desegregation, the paper warned that “the worst may be yet to come” and that “if the

court remains true to form,” Brown v. Board of Education “should be considered

endangered.”149 But while the court’s role in desegregation was increasingly limited, the

use of racial classifications in student assignment as a means of remedying past

segregatory acts had not been jeopardized by these cases.

However, a separate line of jurisprudence developed over the years that did view

racial classifications as constitutionally offensive. Allan Bakke, a white applicant who

had been denied entry to the University of California, Davis medical school first in 1973

and again in 1974, argued that the school’s affirmative action efforts violated his right to

equal protection under the 14th Amendment. Through its “special admissions program,”

the medical school set aside a fixed number of spaces for students who were

economically or educationally disadvantaged, or were members of a recognized racial

minority group. The trial court determined that the program operated as a quota

system.150 While special admissions applicants had the opportunity to compete for every

seat in the class, applicants who didn’t qualify for special admission were barred from

competing for the set-aside seats.151 On appeal, the California Supreme Court declared:

“No college admission policy in history has been so thoroughly discredited in

contemporary times as the use of racial percentages. Originated as a means of exclusion

of racial and religious minorities from higher education, a quota becomes no less

offensive when it serves to exclude a racial majority.”152

The case reached the U.S. Supreme Court in 1977, attracting what Court officials

thought to be the most amicus curiae briefs ever filed, the most prominent coming from

the Justice Department.153 Griffin Bell, President Carter’s Attorney General, cast doubt

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on whether a quota existed at the school and advised the Justices that “racially conscious”

admissions plans were constitutional.154 The following year the justices delivered a

nuanced set of opinions that would have lasting effect.155 Justice Lewis Powell stood at

the center of two opposing pluralities that, taken together, affirmed the California court’s

ruling that the special admissions program at U.C. Davis was unlawful but reversed its

restriction from any consideration of race in its admission process. Speaking on the need

for diversity, Powell wrote, “The State has a substantial interest that legitimately may be

served by a properly devised admissions program involving the competitive consideration

of race and ethnic origin.”156 Summarizing the case, the New York Times editorialized:

“Minorities may be helped through the doors of opportunity but not through a separate

door that is racially reserved for them alone.”157

Bakke was followed by rulings that required all government use of racial

classifications to be assessed under the highest standard of judicial scrutiny.158

“Whenever the government treats any person unequally because of his or her race, that

person has suffered an injury that falls squarely within the language and spirit of the

Constitution's guarantee of equal protection," declared Justice O’Conner, writing for the

majority.159 Therefore, regardless of the race of those “burdened or benefited,” racial

classifications “must serve a compelling governmental interest, and must be narrowly

tailored to further that interest.”160

Petitioners in school desegregation and affirmative action lawsuits sought relief

under the Fourteenth Amendment through different means. The NAACP claimed that

school district practices violated (primarily) black elementary and secondary students’

right to equal protection, while plaintiffs in affirmative action lawsuits argued a violation

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of the right to equal protection held by those who don’t qualify for such programs,

including white university students and white-owned contractors. In contrast to the

“racially conscious” means employed by school desegregation plans, in the mid-1990s,

affirmative action jurisprudence promoted a “color blind” ideal, where racial

classifications are employed as a last resort, only after “consideration of the use of race-

neutral means.”161 These divergent lines of jurisprudence would materialize in the Ho

case.162 The admissions process for Lowell High School was perceived as much more

egregious than the general admissions process for the rest of the SFUSD schools.

Admissions at Lowell, similar to university admissions, was a selective process that

hinged on academic achievement. This was distinct from the typical desegregation

process of sorting students across district schools. The national debate over affirmative

action in higher education, generally, and the meaning and use of racial quotas, in

particular, resonated with local observers of San Francisco’s student assignment system.

A national dialogue

California was entrenched in the debate over affirmative action during this period. In

June 1995, Governor (and presidential candidate) Pete Wilson ordered an end to all state

affirmative action programs not mandated by law or court decree.163 “Today we begin a

new chapter in the journey toward a color-blind society that protects the rights of every

individual and offers equal opportunity to all Californians,” stated Wilson.164 The

following year, voters approved a first-of-its-kind ballot initiative amending the state

constitution by prohibiting discrimination and preferential treatment “on the basis of race,

sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin” in public education, employment, and

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contracting.165 The affirmative action ban was backed by the artfully-named California

Civil Rights Initiative, co-chaired by Ward Connerly, a University of California Regent

well-known for sponsoring a policy change that ended race, ethnicity, and gender

preferences across the university system.166 “Tonight, my friends, we celebrate,” a

euphoric Connerly proclaimed on election night. “In our hearts and minds we dance not

in the darkness but in the warm sunshine to the sweet music of equal treatment for all and

special privileges for none.”167

Affirmative action was a prominent and closely-observed topic of concern across

the nation. Following a five-month administrative review concluding that affirmative

action remained “a useful tool for widening economic and educational opportunity,”

President Clinton forcefully defended the institution in a landmark speech delivered at the

National Archives. “We should reaffirm the principle of affirmative action and fix the

practices,” urged Clinton. “We should have a simple slogan: Mend it, but don't end it.”168

By 1996, Texas became another flash point in the debate. In a controversial ruling, the

Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals determined that the University of Texas Law School erred

in using race as a factor in its admissions process. The Supreme Court declined to hear

the case and so higher education affirmative action programs were presumed

unconstitutional, at least throughout the Fifth Circuit’s jurisdiction.169

But the gravitational center of debate remained California and over the summer,

the Senate Committee on the Judiciary held a hearing on the matter.170 The committee

chair, Utah Senator Orrin Hatch, both condemned the Clinton administration’s “pervasive

politics of preference” and extolled the actions of Governor Wilson and Ward Connerly.

Among the witnesses was Lee Cheng, a 1989 graduate of Lowell High School who had

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since gotten involved in CADC’s consent decree campaign. “I will never forget the shock

and disappointment that I felt upon discovering that Chinese-American applicants had to

score quantifiably higher on the admissions index than any other applicants for the sake

of ensuring diversity,” testified Cheng. “But being subjected to higher standards because

of my race wasn’t enough. Even worse was having the school district hierarchy tell me

that the discrimination was not only legal, but, in fact, was a good thing. That was my

first encounter with institutional racism.”171

The following year, and just days after President Clinton issued a call for a

“constructive national dialogue to confront and work through challenging issues that

surround race,”172 the Judiciary Committee held a hearing ominously titled “State-

Sanctioned Discrimination in America.”173 Speaking on behalf of the minority side,

Democratic Senator Richard Durbin reminded the committee that “any fair appraisal of

State-sanctioned discrimination might start with the document that created this Nation

[i.e., the Constitution].” The affirmative action and school desegregation programs to be

discussed at the hearing “are a response to the legacy that was created by many bad

decisions made at the inception of this great democracy—State-sanctioned discrimination

against blacks and women,” argued Durbin. Invited to speak before the Committee was

Charlene Loen, the mother of Patrick Wong, the named plaintiff in Ho who was denied

admission to Lowell in 1994. “Under the consent decree, hard work and good grades are

not always enough,” stated Loen. “My son, Patrick, found out the hard way.”174 Wong’s

combined grade and test score was 58, high enough for a student of any racial and ethnic

subgroup except “Chinese” to gain admission to Lowell. She subsequently tried, without

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success, to enroll her son into his second, third, fourth, and fifth choice schools.175 Loen

teared up as she continued to relay her plight:

By treating people as members of racial groups rather than as individuals with the

same rights before the law, the consent decree has dashed the hopes of children,

denied my son and many others the right to opportunities they earned through

hard work and diligence, condemned children to needless busing, prevented

parents from being involved in their schools and holding school administrators

accountable, and divided the people of San Francisco.176

Loen’s story was compelling, and it would be recounted numerous times over the ensuing

months by several nationally-prominent political figures.177 Back in San Francisco, her

testimony was perhaps the defining moment in the case, at least in the mind of Daniel

Girard, the lead attorney for the Ho plaintiffs. Girard traveled to Washington, D.C. with

Loen and assisted in the preparation of her statement. “I knew that it was going to be

powerful footage because she was so articulate and presents very well,” recalled Girard.

“It was on MacNeil-Lehrer that night when I got back to my hotel… and later that week,

Judge Orrick got us [i.e., Ho attorneys] all on the phone and wanted to know what she

was doing on TV and how this had all happened. And I think he was pretty shaken by it

all—the presentation to him of the decree as being a source of this injustice.”178

By the fall of 1997, the California State Board of Education realigned its position

to that of the Ho plaintiffs: “in opposition to the maintenance of racial quotas as ordered

pursuant to the Consent Decree.”179 The move followed a request by Governor Wilson to

the president of the board that it “take a leadership role in ridding California’s public

schools of an invidious form of racial discrimination that limits students’ educational

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opportunities solely because of their race.”180 At the time, the California Department of

Education, the State Board of Education, and the State Superintendent of Public

Instruction were named defendants, along with the SFNAACP and the school district, in

the Ho lawsuit. The state board, composed entirely of appointees of the Republican

governor, moved quickly to find outside counsel.181 But the reversal was met with

opposition from State Superintendent Delaine Eastin, a Democrat, who asserted that the

consent decree “has worked to prohibit racial isolation of all students and to provide

academic achievement of all students.”182

This was an extremely thorny issue for the CADC. While support from the state

was certainly welcome, it came about for the wrong reasons. San Francisco’s student

assignment system “demonstrates the perversity of the affirmative action mind-set,”

wrote Governor Wilson.183 “I don’t agree with that,” remarked CADC President Roland

Quan. “Our group has never been for dismantling affirmative action and in fact we are

supportive of affirmative action.”184 Indeed, CADC had worked on campaigns in support

of race-based remedies to increase Chinese American representation in government

contracting and civil service positions, including in the area of public education.185 But

these Republican efforts to latch onto the case clouded the argument made by the

Democratic Club. “Many groups have tried to piggyback on our case and interpret it to fit

their agendas,” complained Quan. “We want to emphasize that this case is about ending

discrimination and not at all about ending affirmative action.”186

The distinctions between the affirmative action programs supported by the CADC

and the desegregation program institutionalized by the consent decree had been a point of

focus for their opponents, particularly the SFNAACP and CAA, throughout the course of

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the campaign.187 CADC anticipated the association that might be made. “We are not

against affirmative action for disadvantaged students,” stated a 1994 press release

announcing the lawsuit. “In fact, we are strongly committed to ensuring opportunities for

disadvantaged students. The quotas used by the SFUSD…in reality provide admissions

preferences to non-disadvantaged” subgroups.188 “It’s sort of an intellectual disconnect

sometimes,” remarked Henry Louie. “CADC at that time and continues to this day to be

strong advocates of affirmative action.” Indeed, former CADC board member Doug Chan

speaks personally about its benefits: “[In] my experience…affirmative action [that is

narrowly tailored] is still a necessary and valid tool to pry open opportunities for

previously-disenfranchised or excluded groups, racial minorities, and women, to assure

that public activities and opportunities are allocated with reference to a relevant standard

of parity.”189 This commitment to affirmative action was embedded in the programmatic

work of the organization for years. And “that’s where I was very critical of them,” recalls

Henry Der. CADC supported the consideration of race when it meant submitting a

government bid, “but they’re certainly not going to have any race consideration when it

comes to the schools.”190

Appeal

The two crusades, SFNAACP and Ho, working on behalf of the same right yet seeking

different outcomes, would collide in a decisive manner in 1998.191 The appeal of Judge

Orrick’s order denying summary judgment was argued before a three-judge panel of the

Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in April 1998. (By this point in time, plaintiffs had been

joined in the appeal by the California Board of Education, following its vote to oppose

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the consent decree.) In June, the appeal was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.192 The

panel majority’s opinion might have ended there, however, it went on to detail two issues

left for trial: “Do vestiges remain of the racism that justified paragraph 13 of the consent

decree in 1982 [sic]? Is paragraph 13 necessary to remove the vestiges if they do

remain?”193 Citing recent Supreme Court desegregation and affirmative action cases, the

majority opinion reminded the parties that racial classifications are suspect and subject to

strict scrutiny, writing that they may only be used by the government if “its use is found

to be necessary as the way of repairing injuries inflicted on persons because of race.”194

While the SFUSD had asserted that vestiges of racism did remain, the majority panel

determined them to be conclusory. At trial, defendants would need to provide concrete

evidence that tied back to the discriminatory practices justifying the consent decree in the

first place. Once this was shown, defendants would need to prove that paragraph 13 was

“a remedy fitted to a wrong”—a narrowly tailored policy serving a compelling

government interest.195

“The gamble at the appellate court had paid off handsomely” for the plaintiffs

observed David Levine.196 Although the appeal by Ho was dismissed, upholding the

district court’s denial of the motion for summary judgment, the majority panel’s opinion

did not auger well for the defendants. The circuit court determined that racial balancing

efforts by the SFUSD could only be used “if necessary to correct the effects of

government action of a racist character” and that the district would need additional (non-

conclusory) evidence than had been previously presented.197 The circuit court ruling

came amidst a budget crisis for the school district. While Sacramento legislators were

haggling over a surplus of funds, the SFUSD was preparing for cuts nearing $20

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million.198 The consent decree provided a significant source of revenue that the district

had come to rely on. With the district incurring well over $30 million in desegregation

program expenses each year, much of it reimbursable by the state, the Ho action and its

impact on the ultimate fate of the consent decree was an added concern—in addition to

racial segregation and the achievement gap— for local observers.199

In the months immediately following the circuit court ruling, parties prepared for

a September 1998 trial.200 However, during a status conference in late August it became

apparent to Judge Orrick that “defendants were utterly unprepared.”201 The trial was

subsequently moved to February 16, 1999. At the August conference, the school district

offered a glint of hope by informing the court that an agreement was within reach. After

Governor Wilson’s letter urging the California State Board of Education to align itself

with the Ho plaintiffs, Delaine Eastin, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, sought

separate legal representation for herself and the California Department of Education.202

Her new attorneys began to explore settlement options with counsel for each party over

the summer. Following these exploratory discussions, a compromise position began to

take shape. “Their legal position migrated to one more in the center,” wrote David

Levine. Although the consent decree continued to be necessary, it no longer was

narrowly tailored, as required by law. 203 The three aspects of a settlement, according to

Levine, were: (1) The elimination of racial classifications as required by the Ho plaintiffs;

(2) a release from court supervision in the near future; and, (3) the avoidance of racial

isolation and identifiability, as required by SFNAACP and the school district.204Upon

hearing from the district the possibility of a settlement, Orrick appointed a special master

to oversee discussions.205

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In October, the SFNAACP, the SFUSD, and the state superintendent proposed

two sets of modifications to the consent decree. The first modification provided for an

“orderly transition to unitary status” by proposing the submittal of sections of the consent

decree to the court for dismissal by 2000 and proposing that a unitary status hearing be

held by 2003, with a final deadline for dismissal of any remaining portions of the decree

by 2005.206 The second, more controversial set of modifications proposed a new student

assignment system to be implemented no later than the 2000-2001 school term. Students

would be “assigned on the basis of geographic distribution, residence, socio-economic

status, and OERs” (optional enrollment requests), with each school having at least six

racial/ethnic subgroups represented in its student body.207 While race or ethnicity “shall

not be the sole consideration in determining such admission criteria,” argued the

defendants, “District officials may consider many factors, including the desire to promote

racial, residential, geographic and ethnic diversity in all schools.”208

The attempt to modify the consent decree was described by Levine as an “end-

run” around the Ho plaintiffs, who had recently filed a motion to immediately halt the

execution of paragraph 13 of the consent decree. Defendants used the proposal to contend

that plaintiffs’ preliminary injunction was not necessary.209 The court described the

proposal as “vague and incomplete.”210 More importantly, by requiring that schools

enroll no less than six subgroups, the proposed modifications preserved racial

classifications questioned by the circuit court. “The parties must demonstrate that such a

system meets strict scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth

Amendment of the United States Constitution,” admonished Orrick. “The parties have

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not attempted to meet this burden.”211 The court consequently rejected defendants’

request to modify the decree.

The fateful year ended with a second appeal by Ho. “One of the key legal disputes

in this action was over the burden of proof,” explained Orrick. “With each party arguing

that the opposing party bore the burden of proof.”212 The issue had been clarified back in

June with the Ninth Circuit’s opinion, but defendants maintained that it was inconsistent

with Supreme Court case law, and that plaintiffs, in fact, bore the burden. Orrick was

concerned that the dispute was preventing the preparatory work to be done: “developing

an adequate factual record to ensure that the trial in this action would be based on facts,

rather than on an absence of facts.”213 To move things along, Orrick re-appointed

Klitgaard in November as special master in charge of drafting a report to the court on

“discriminatory acts, policies and practices by state actors, at or prior to the time of the

adoption of the Consent Decree in 1983.”214 Ho regarded Orrick’s move as an

unwarranted interference with the adversarial process. “It appeared that the court,

confronted with the defendants’ failure to prepare for trial, had decided to appoint a

special master to do a substantial portion of what the defendants had not done to prepare

the case,” wrote Levine.215 Plaintiffs went back to the circuit seeking an emergency

petition for a writ of mandamus, which was granted in short order. The Ninth Circuit

allowed Klitgaard to give his report to the parties. But from that point forward, the

defendants, ill-prepared though they were, carried the burden of gathering evidence.

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Settlement

Over the final few days before the bench trial was to begin, the parties made one last push

to settle. However, on the eve of the trial they remained at an impasse. In what was

literally a last-minute breakthrough, a settlement would not be negotiated until the

following morning. Levine describes the scene thusly:

I walked into Judge Orrick's courtroom on February 16, 1999, expecting to hear

opening statements. However, as I entered the courtroom packed with spectators,

a defense attorney proposed an alternative formulation for what had been the

sticking point the night before. The lawyers caucused in the hallways, out of sight

of the numerous reporters and other spectators, and decided on the final points

perhaps an hour after the trial was scheduled to start.216

As was the case in 1983, the parties were able to avert what surely would have been a

racially charged trial.217 “The NAACP and the District, as well as the Superintendent of

Public Instruction, worked night and day with Mr. Girard… to come up with a viable and,

at this stage, proper solution,” declared Judge Orrick, in announcing the terms of the

settlement.218 The consent decree would continue, but with significant amendments.219

The central stipulation was that:

District officials may consider many factors, including the desire to promote

residential, geographic, economic, racial and ethnic diversity in all SFUSD

schools. However, race or ethnicity may not be the primary or predominant

consideration in determining such admission criteria. Further, the SFUSD will not

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assign or admit any student to a particular school, class or program on the basis of

the race or ethnicity of that student.220

In addition, the racial or ethnic subgroup identification of students would no longer be

required and enrollment forms would include a “decline to state” option.221 With these

provisions in mind, the school district would develop a new student assignment plan that

would include the replacement of paragraph 13 of the consent decree.222 The plan would

be reviewed by the SFNAACP and the Ho plaintiffs before being submitted to the court

for approval. The parties agreed to terminate the consent decree before 2003, barring an

extenuating circumstance.

The fairness hearing took place on April 20. That morning, outside the federal

courthouse, the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary

(BAMN) held a press conference and rally in opposition to the settlement. To the chants

of “Equal quality education! We will fight for integration!” speakers from Lowell Black

Student Union, Chinese for Affirmative Action, and elsewhere expressed fear that the

settlement would lead to the resegregation of schools.223 It will be “disastrous” for

African American students, worried Lowell senior Jamaal Marshall. “I feel my race is not

welcome at Lowell. When you can fit all of the school's African American students in

one classroom, you have a problem.” 224 Inside the courtroom, most of the speakers

opposed the settlement but were unable to challenge its legality. “If this settlement were

approved, it would be even harder for black and other minority students to get into

Lowell,” wrote Rahel Tekste, an African American student at Galileo High School

petitioning the Court to be heard in opposition of the settlement. “It would also result in

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my school becoming more segregated. That would hurt the quality of education for

minorities and all students.”225

BAMN’s political theory was that “the attack on affirmative action provided… an

opportunity to build a new civil rights movement.”226 For several years, BAMN

organized throughout the Bay Area and in other regions of the country in opposition to

the U.C. Regents ban on affirmative action, Proposition 209, and on behalf of several

other issues of racial justice. When the threat to SFUSD’s race conscious student

assignment system came to light, BAMN built a campaign around the issue, organizing

inside the schools and out in the neighborhoods.227 “We started getting calls from not

only students but parents and teachers,” remembered national coordinator Shanta

Driver.228 For BAMN, the fairness hearing “marked a starting point in the movement to

defend integration and equality in San Francisco schools.”229 Beginning in May and

continuing throughout the remainder of the year, the group organized additional press

conferences, “interventions” at school board meetings, and a community tribunal calling

for the district to withdraw from the Ho settlement.230 “We were demanding a voice in

the courtroom,” recalled Ronald Cruz, a BAMN organizer who at the time was a recent

graduate of Lowell. “Because you had the NAACP prepared to settle, and the school

board prepared to settle,…[but] the pro-integration students and the community did not

have a voice.”231 The settlement is unacceptable, argued Driver in a letter to the court. “It

is a betrayal of the city’s children, of the communities from which those children come,

and of the city and its history as a whole.”232

A coalition of advocates for the Chinese American community led by Chinese for

Affirmative Action registered their opposition to the settlement, arguing that “schools

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must remain integrated to provide high quality education and to meet the needs of

limited-English proficient students.”233 The settlement “closes a chapter in San Francisco

public education.” wrote Diane Chin, executive director of CAA. “It has been a sad

chapter: one that pitted one minority group against all others and divided that minority

group.” Beyond the obvious changes the consent decree would bring, it would lead to the

characterization that Chinese Americans do not value integration, Chin feared. “Once

again, Chinese Americans are being used as a proxy for anti-affirmative action and anti-

integration viewpoints, which ultimately increase discrimination against our community.

Lost in this debate have been the many Chinese Americans who spoke out for

integration.” 234

A month prior to the settlement, the Consent Decree Advisory Committee lauded

the community-wide cooperation that distinguished San Francisco’s desegregation plan:

“Almost all of the efforts since the early 1980s has been directed toward finding

solutions, not battling over history.”235 The collaborative nature the consent decree

fostered allowed for a plan designed by educators that was achieving positive results,

both in desegregation and academic achievement, argued the committee.236 But the

settlement proposal, and in particular, the exclusive process undertaken to determine its

scope, troubled committee chair Gary Orfield: “I would certainly not have spent a great

deal of time working on very complex issues of educational inequality had I thought that

there was any chance that the entire effort would be junked without a hearing by a group

of lawyers who did not even bother to address the urgent issues of denial of equal

education we documented or consult with us on the feasibility of resolving them within

the arbitrary deadline set in this decree”237

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Despite the opposition to the proposed settlement, Judge Orrick, finding it to be

fair, reasonable, and adequate, approved it in July 1999. Responding to the

“misunderstanding” brought up by the students organized by BAMN (and by Gary

Orfield in comments to the court) that San Francisco’s schools would now be on a path

toward racial resegregation, Orrick pointed to paragraph C of the proposed settlement,

which allowed the district to promote racial and ethnic diversity in all SFUSD schools.238

In fact, David Ely, an expert for the State Superintendent, was prepared to testify at trial

that devising a student assignment system “using a combination of individual and census-

derived socioeconomic factors to assure reasonable socioeconomic diversity at each

school” would not result in racial or ethnic resegregation.239 However, given the fact that

Ely's computer modeling was based on 1990 census data and on test data that may not

include scores for all the students in the district, it is important that the results of such an

assignment system are carefully monitored to ensure that no school becomes racially

isolated.

The timeframe Judge Orrick set was aggressive. For the 1999-2000 school year, a

temporary “default” plan was to be implemented. The SFUSD would modify its student

assignment system by eliminating the enrollment caps of paragraph 13 and an assignment

priority given to African American and Latino students. Beyond this, enrollment would

be consistent with prior procedure—students would be given their assignments based on

home address or optional enrollment requests through a process of random selection,

allowing for certain nonracial priorities (e.g., a sibling preference), by grade and program

at each school.240 By early August, Orrick ordered parties to submit a modified consent

decree that incorporated the changes outlined in the settlement agreement. And by

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October, a new student assignment plan for the following school year was to be provided.

Ely’s prepared testimony and early drafts provided by the SFUSD student assignment

committee gave Ho a sense of what the district’s plan for the 2000-2001 school year

might entail. “The expectation was that the committee would propose to redraw school

attendance zones, as the state superintendent’s expert suggested, in order to maximize

diversity and use a race-neutral lottery system to assign students within the zones,” wrote

Levine. “Second, the school district committee would test a variety of socio-economic

factors to determine what sort of a mix would best achieve the racial and ethnic diversity

the school district wanted to maintain.”241

School Lottery

With the introduction of Educational Redesign in 1978, school choice became a much

more prominent and legitimate feature of San Francisco’s student assignment system.

Through Redesign, Temporary Attendance Permit (TAP), the school choice component

of Horseshoe, was rechristened Optional Enrollment Request (OER), and several new

alternative schools (and alternative programs within traditional schools) were established

and made available to all students, regardless of where they lived. In an attempt to close

the loophole that TAP had grown into, Superintendent Alioto promised to closely

monitor and strictly enforce a provision requiring that an approved OER request not

adversely affect the racial balance of both the sending and receiving school. While the

SFNAACP regarded TAP as a segregatory mechanism, Alioto’s promise allowed the

district to tout OER as its “primary voluntary desegregation” effort, a key component of

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Educational Redesign that assisted in the creation of a racially and ethnically diverse

school district.242 When the consent decree was approved in 1983, school choice was

extended even further with a special provision that gave students residing in Bayview-

Hunters Point an option to attend any other school in the district, with transportation

provided.243

OER was a nine-month process that required a fair amount of advance planning.

The district’s Educational Placement Center (EPC) received requests during the winter

and notified students of their placement by spring for enrollment in the fall. Two types of

school choice requests were handled by the EPC—students wishing to enroll in an

alternative school or program and students wishing to transfer out of their assigned

school.244 In random order, students were matched to their schools of choice until the

racial and ethnic subgroup enrollment caps were reached. Following this, new

assignments were made only if space became available (within the constraints of the

caps). Preferences, each with their own weighting, were given. An applicant with a

sibling already attending the requested school was given the highest priority. In nearly

every case, all applicants with this preference were accommodated.245Preferences were

also given to applicants bumped from the school designated by their home address,246

applicants with addresses from certain low-income zip codes,247 and applicants who

identified as Latino or African American. New applicants who did not receive their

choice were placed in a school determined by the EPC based on home address and

available transportation options. Students who did not receive their choice remained at

their current school.

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The OER program was popular. By the 1991-1992 school year, SFUSD processed

well over 11,000 transfer requests and approved approximately sixty percent of them.

Nearly forty percent of all SFUSD students were on optional enrollment permits,

attending a school other than their designated school. “These numbers attest to the

magnitude of the District’s program of allowing maximum student and family choice

within desegregation guidelines,” proclaimed SFUSD’s 1992 annual report to the

court.248 And although the district was led by Ramon Cortines, the second superintendent

since Alioto was forced out back in 1985, the controls put in place by Alioto remained.

During the first decade of the consent decree, only a handful of schools had been deemed

racially identifiable (i.e., when a racial or ethnic subgroup comprised greater than 45

percent of the student enrollment). This was a far cry from Horseshoe, when between

one-quarter and one-third of the schools were racially identifiable, much less the pre-

desegregation era of the late 1960s when more than three-quarters of the schools were

racially identifiable (see Table 17).

Table 17. Percent of SFUSD schools with at least one racial or ethnic group >45%

School Year

Total Number of SFUSD Schools

Number of Racially Identifiable Schools

Percent of Racially Identifiable Schools

1965-1966 81 69 85.2% 1968-1969 83 65 78.3 1971-1972 85 27 31.8 1974-1975 91 25 27.5 1977-1978 94 25 26.6 1980-1981 94 22 23.4 1983-1984 101 11 10.9 1986-1987 104 2 1.9 1989-1990 103 3 2.9 1992-1993 102 1 1.0

Source: Declaration of Donald I. Barfield, Attachment C-5, C-7. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1228, 4/11/01).

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But OER was not without its faults. Although it was a widely accessed program, the

district had trouble reaching some immigrant and Latino parents. Among the principal

concerns of several community advocates brought to light during META’s motion to

intervene was the “lack of a concerted organized effort on the part of the District to

meaningfully explain to Latino parents… OER procedures and to make the process

accessible to them.”249 These concerns were echoed several years later by the court

monitor. “Too often, it is the parents with more money and more time who can obtain

additional information regarding the OER process and alternative schools in general,”

wrote Stuart Biegel. “These realities raise issues of equal access that cannot and should

not be ignored.”250 In addition to the need for better outreach, OER was considered by

many stakeholders to remain a loophole (albeit one not as large as TAP) for parents

wishing to “game the system.” Several informants cautioned that “ethnicity on paper

didn’t mean the same in reality.” As Mark Sanchez, a former teacher and two-term school

board member, recalled, “You’d go in a school and you could see that it was eighty

percent black. But on paper, it wasn’t. It was forty percent black.” Sanchez attributed this

phenomenon in part to parents gaming the system by misidentifying the subgroup of their

child so as to secure a more favorable assignment. Other families, including some living

outside of San Francisco altogether, would falsely claim a home address in one of the

priority zip codes.251

The share of students on optional enrollment permits steadily increased during the

1990s such that by the end of the decade, just over 56 percent of the district attended a

school other than the one designated by home address.252 In addition, the decade

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witnessed a gradual loosening of the once tightly controlled consent decree enrollment

caps. Although some political observers consider Superintendent Rojas to have been an

active supporter of the consent decree, and while there is evidence to support this claim,

the number of racially identifiable schools rapidly increased during his tenure.253 For the

1992-1993 school year, the first complete term with Rojas as superintendent, SFUSD had

only one racially identifiable school. However, by the 1998-1999 school year, the district

identified 34 racially identifiable schools (see Figure 6).254 Despite the resegregation

taking place, the Superintendent supported optional enrollment to the very end,

describing it as a way to attract students to all corners of the district, as long as the

schools were rigorous, well-resourced, and of superior quality.255

The spring and summer months of 1999 were extremely demanding for the school

board and central office staff. In addition to the Ho settlement, which produced the most

significant change to San Francisco’s student assignment system since the consent decree

was first approved in 1983, SFUSD faced several other crises. In March, the California

State Assembly called for an external audit in order to investigate questionable spending

practices of the Rojas administration.256 In April, a local newspaper raised the possibility

that the district manipulated standardized test score results.257 And by May, the school

board was embroiled in its perennial predicament of balancing the district’s budget, this

time with an expected shortfall of $17 million. Amidst all of this, the district’s long-time

superintendent, Bill Rojas, resigned in order to take the helm of Dallas Public Schools.

“This news couldn't have come at a worse time,” remarked Kent Mitchell, president of

the teachers union. “We have to deal with assignment policy for next year, budget

cutbacks, possible layoffs— issues that take leadership.” School board member Jill

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Figure 6. Racial Identifiability in SFSUD schools, 1965-2006

Source: School years 1965-2001 from Exhibit, Declaration of Donald Barfield, Attachments C-5 and C-7.

SFNAACP v. SFUSD (4/11/01, DF1228). School years 2001-2006 from RPA

Wynns agreed. “We are entering a period of high drama and anxiety,” she remarked.

“Board members have a tremendous responsibility to try to make this major transition go

smoothly.”258 Rojas had been an ally of the SFNAACP (even with the yearly increase in

the number of racially identifiable schools on his watch). “We believe that Dr. Rojas

showed leadership and went forward in an educationally sound manner,” praised

SFNAACP attorney Peter Cohn. “He was regularly working on equality in the

curriculum.”259 The departure of Rojas immediately led to questions about how the next

0.0%

10.0%

20.0%

30.0%

40.0%

50.0%

60.0%

70.0%

80.0%

90.0%

100.0%19

65-1

966

1967

-196

8

1969

-197

0

1971

-197

2

1973

-197

4

1975

-197

6

1977

-197

8

1979

-198

0

1981

-198

2

1983

-198

4

1985

-198

6

1987

-198

8

1989

-199

0

1991

-199

2

1993

-199

4

1995

-199

6

1997

-199

8

1999

-200

0

2001

-200

2

2003

-200

4

2005

-200

6

Percent of SFUSD Schools with at least one racial/ethnic subgroup >45%

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superintendent would work with the other consent decree parties. A deputy

superintendent filled in on an interim basis for the 1999-2000 school year before the

district hired Arlene Ackerman, Chancellor of D.C. Public Schools, to run the district

beginning August 2000.260

Proposed Settlement, Phase II of the Consent Decree

David Ely, the state’s expert, claimed that a student assignment system “that utilizes

primarily, or entirely, socio-economic factors should not result in resegregation of the

SFUSD schools,” as long as there was sufficient monitoring and oversight.261 His

anticipated testimony indicated to many that the district would propose a permanent

student assignment plan for the 2000-2001 school year (and beyond) that would find a

substitute for race and ethnicity in order to meet both the court’s proscription on racial

classifications and the district’s goal of racial diversity.262 And in fact, early drafts of the

proposed new student assignment plan (dubbed PNSAP) did just that. But as the plan

developed, the district reported that such a system would be undesirable:

Originally, it was theorized that using socio-economic status (SES) as a primary

singular criterion and developing district guidelines using SES instead of

race/ethnicity, would result in racially/ethnically diverse student populations. This

did not actually happen. The District has concluded that, at this point in time,

race/ethnicity must be considered as a part of the criteria used to assign students

to schools to prevent schools becoming increasingly racially/ethnically

segregated.263

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The PNSAP that was submitted to the court contemplated an index of diversity

comprised of four “characteristics that describe students, and particularly may be

indicators of specialized student learning needs.” 264 Indicators assessing poverty level,

academic achievement, and English language proficiency were to be combined with an

applicant’s racial and ethnic classification to create one of 624 possible diversity

profiles.265 Each school in the district would have a Composite Diversity Index (CDI)

derived from the diversity profiles of the existing student population. For every open seat

in a school, the assignment system would place the student that would best contribute to

that school’s CDI-calculated diversity. (A new CDI score would be calculated after each

additional new student is added.) “There are no set percentages, caps, or guidelines for

race and ethnicity that act to prevent the placement of any student,” read the plan

submitted to the court. “Rather, every student is considered for every seat every time a

placement decision is made.”266 Assignments would occur over several rounds. For each

school, siblings of current students and students needing special programs offered onsite

would be assigned first.267 Then, students living within a chosen school’s “geographic

proximity area” or in a district-designated preference zone would be assigned. Finally, if

open seats remained, any other student who requested the school would be considered.268

The PNSAP made no changes to Lowell High School’s admission system. The policy of

admitting students below Lowell’s cutoff score on a “value-added” basis that included

special consideration for underrepresented students of color would remain in place.269

The PNSAP elevated school choice as a primary mechanism to place students in

schools. Under the former system, students were initially assigned to a school designated

by home address. Only those applicants seeking an alternative school or wishing to

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transfer out of their designated school went through the OER process. In contrast, the

PNSAP would not make an initial assignment based on address. Rather, all applicants

were expected to choose up to five schools.270 “The idea is that everyone should be

proactive about choosing the schools they want, whether it's their neighborhood school or

another one,” remarked Jennie Horn, the district's enrollment supervisor.271

In the fall of 1999, when the district submitted PNSAP to the court, it noted that

the previous student assignment system “defines diversity only in terms of race and

ethnicity, … the new plan defines diversity from a multidimensional perspective.”272

Since race and ethnicity classification was but one of four diversity factors, the district

assured the court that the plan conformed to the consent decree settlement and was

constitutional. Ho disagreed. From their perspective, any use of racial and ethnic

classification in the assignment of students was disallowed by the settlement.

Furthermore, Ho was doubtful that the PNSAP would pass the strict scrutiny standard.273

On the issue of compliance with the consent decree settlement, paragraph C was the

source of the dispute. Although district officials were permitted to consider many factors,

including racial and ethnic diversity, in setting criteria for admissions, it could not

“assign or admit any student to a particular school, class or program on the basis of the

race or ethnicity of that student, except as related to the language needs of the student or

otherwise to assure compliance with controlling federal or state law.”274 In other words,

SFUSD could have the goal of racial and ethnic diversity, but the means by which it

would achieve that goal could not include the assignment of students on the basis of

racial classification.275 On the issue of strict scrutiny, the district argued that a lesser legal

standard applied.

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In December 1999, a frustrated Judge Orrick rejected the PNSAP because it

“expressly considered the race of each student in violation of the Equal Protection

Clause… [and] violated the terms of the settlement agreement.”276 With school

assignments due in the spring, the district was now facing a difficult situation. “It’s

showtime. And we’ve got 65,000 school children and their parents not clear about what

school, particular schools their children are going to,” remarked Orrick. “And the court is

not disposed to defer decisions any longer on this matter.”277 Rather than revising the

PNSAP so that it was entirely race neutral, the school board decided to continue the plan

for another year, even though doing so would likely increase racial identifiability at

several schools. “The judge seems to think you can address the effects of segregation

without considering race. Try as we might, we haven't been able to come up with a

mechanism that will allow integrated schools [without using race and ethnicity],”

observed school board member Dan Kelly. “So in the interest of continuity, we're going

to go with the plan we used last year, though the impacts are very negative.”278 The

decision was derided by the SFNAACP as “throwing in the towel.”279

Although the use of racial classifications had been eliminated by the July 1999

settlement, the original goal of the consent decree remained intact:

A major goal… shall be to eliminate racial/ethnic segregation or identifiability in

any S.F.U.S.D. school, program, or classroom and to achieve the broadest

practicable distribution throughout the system of students from the racial and

ethnic groups which comprise the student enrollment of the S.F.U.S.D.280

The consent decree, recognizing that reaching this goal “will require continued and

accelerated efforts to achieve academic excellence throughout the S.F.U.S.D.,”

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compelled the district to address student achievement in a concerted manner.281 This was

regarded as an essential component of the decree.282 However, as David Levine observed,

“What was particularly discouraging about the PNSAP was its utter lack of attention to

educational quality.”

Following Arlene Ackerman’s arrival in August 2000, the work to devise a new

student assignment system was folded into a larger effort to develop a comprehensive

plan that sought both diversity and academic achievement. By spring 2001, the plan,

titled Excellence for All, was adopted by the board of education and formally introduced

to the public.283 “We are focused on our children's success,” stated Ackerman. “This

comprehensive plan is a blueprint for success.”284 The plan outlined three ways to

achieve diversity: a new student assignment system, a more robust recruitment strategy,

and the strategic placement of programs (for example, language immersion was a popular

program that had potential to draw a wide variety of students from across the district to

schools that would otherwise be disfavored).285 Excellence for All became the district’s

interpretation of the court mandate. “Compliance with the consent decree equals

compliance with Excellence for All,” remarked Matt Kelemen, special assistant to the

superintendent.286 But despite Judge Orrick’s ruling against the PNSAP, the district’s

plan once again proposed the use of race. In this version, seven race-neutral factors would

first be used to assign students. However, if an incoming class was not diverse enough,

students would be reassigned using race as an eighth factor. “How can you look at

diversity without considering race?” wondered Ackerman. “We believe we will achieve

real diversity by using the other factors. Race will be used only as needed.”287 The plan

faced immediate criticism from Ho. “Even though they're saying race is a last resort, the

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plan is in violation of the agreement and is unconstitutional,” stated Levine.288 In April,

Judge Orrick appointed Thomas Klitgaard special master to facilitate negotiations among

attorneys for all parties.289 After two and half months, a preliminary settlement was

reached (hereafter, “2001 settlement”).290

Following a fairness hearing in the fall, Judge Orrick required the district to

address concerns raised by recently released reports of the consent decree monitor and

the consent decree advisory committee. In addition, Orrick approved three amendments

to the consent decree.291 One, the termination date was pushed back to December 31,

2005, with desegregation funding from the state continuing through the end of the 2005-

2006 school year.292 Two, the allocation of desegregation funds from the state would be

more closely tracked and targeted to the specific goals of the decree.293 Three, the

parameters regarding student assignment would read, in part: “The SFUSD shall not use

or include race or ethnicity as a criterion or factor to assign any student to any school

class, classroom, or program, and shall not use race or ethnicity as a primary or

predominant consideration in setting any such criteria or factors.”294

Excellence for All, Diversity Index Lottery

In compliance with Orrick’s order, Excellence for All was revised in January 2002 and

students were assigned based on a new system, the Diversity Index, for the 2002-2003

school year.295 (Judge Orrick retired at the end of 2001 and the two cases were reassigned

to William H. Alsup in January 2002.)296 Similar to PNSAP, school choice was at the

heart of the Diversity Index. All students changing schools would submit an application

listing up to five choices. “SFUSD maintains an enrollment process that enables parents

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to express preferences regarding which schools, in addition to their attendance area

school, they would like their child to attend,” stated the district’s plan.297 If there were

sufficient seats to accommodate all applicants for a particular school and grade, those

applicants would be assigned (without consideration to the effects the assignment might

have on a school’s diversity). However, if there were more applicants than seats available

at a particular school and grade, the system would assign students through what was

called the Diversity Index Lottery. Under the lottery, a diversity profile was created for

each applicant through six binary indicators: (1) An SES indicator based on whether or

not the student participated in either the free and reduced lunch program, CalWORKs, or

public housing. (2) An academic achievement indicator. For incoming kindergarteners,

the indicator was based on whether or not the student attended preschool. For first and

second graders, the indicator was based on whether the student scored above or below the

50th percentile of a kindergarten assessment. For students in the remaining grades, the

indicator was based on whether the student scored above or below the 30th percentile of a

standardized achievement test. (3) An indicator based on whether or not a student’s

mother attended college. (4) An indicator based on whether the student was proficient in

English. (5) An indicator based on whether the sending school of the applicant was above

or below the 40th percentile in the Academic Performance Index, a California ranking

system. (6) An indicator based on whether or not the student’s home language was

English.298 (The system would be modified over the years. For the 2004-2005 term,

applicants could choose up to seven schools, rather than five. In 2006-2007, the language

proficiency factor was eliminated, and the following school year the mother’s educational

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background factor was eliminated and an extreme poverty factor was added in its

place.)299

As with the prior system, a “pre-assignment” preference allowing siblings to be

placed at the same school was given. Similarly, students with specialized learning needs

had priority to those schools with an appropriate program (for the most part, English

Learners exiting a newcomer program and entering a bilingual program, special

education students in a Special Day and Inclusion classes).300 (This was not an

insignificant group of students. In 2002, at least 40 percent of all elementary students

were English Learners and approximately 12 percent of the entire district enrollment was

classified as special education.)301 Traditional schools would first consider applicants

who lived within its attendance zone. Alternative schools would consider all applicants at

once. As in PNSAP, for each available seat, the applicant contributing the most to the

overall diversity of the school would be assigned. And after each individual assignment,

the grade’s diversity index would be recalculated.

Excellence for All also introduced a new plan for Lowell High School.302

Admissions would occur through three “bands.” Band One assigned seventy percent of

Lowell’s available seats and was based on grade point average (GPA) and standardized

test scores.303 Band Two assigned fifteen percent of available seats. Students who met the

GPA requirement but didn’t gain entrance through Band One could be nominated based

on factors including extenuating circumstances, community service, and leadership,

among others. Under Band Three, the remaining fifteen percent of seats were assigned to

applicants from underrepresented feeder schools that received a nomination from their

principal.

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The inability of the Diversity Index to achieve the consent decree’s goal of

reducing racial and ethnic identifiability immediately became apparent. Beyond the

restriction on using race and ethnicity as a factor in student assignment, the sorting

mechanism only went into effect in situations where there were fewer spaces than

applicants. In other words, the mechanism that sought to create diversity through race-

neutral means only impacted a subset of students and schools. During its initial year, the

Diversity Index was not a factor in the assignment of students to 17 percent of the district

schools, including 24 percent of the district’s middle schools.304 Also, the number of

students who failed to participate in the school choice process was not insignificant.

These students, who tended to be among the more educationally disadvantaged in the

district, were “assigned by default” by the EPC and often were used to fill seats in

underenrolled, underperforming schools.305

Stuart Biegel, the consent decree monitor, warned that the district was rapidly

resegregating. Thirty-four of the district’s 114 schools were severely segregated at one or

more grade levels during the 2002-2003 school year, up from 20 schools three years

before. (The monitor defined severe segregation as sixty percent or more of a

racial/ethnic subgroup.) In two years, the number of schools severely segregated at one or

more grade levels would climb to 43.306 “There is an apparent lack of congruence

between the current Diversity Index factors and the goals of Paragraphs 12 and 13,”

wrote Biegel, referring to the section of the consent decree that required the elimination

of racial and ethnic identifiability.307 The schools that were most severely segregated on

the basis of race and ethnicity were also the schools determined to be the most diverse,

based on the six diversity indicators of the Index.

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“School Reform Begins with Enrollment”308

In the fall of 1999, amidst mounting concern and disillusionment with the SFUSD, a

group of 300 parents gathered for the kick-off event of Parents for Public Schools—San

Francisco (PPS-SF).309 The newly formed organization had embarked on a campaign to

recommit parents to the local public school system. “Schools are not isolated islands in a

community. They need the support of the whole community in order to succeed,” wrote

PPS-SF founders Sandra Halladey and Deena Zacharin. “We value public education as a

community enterprise. We are organizing to promote and focus attention on the public

schools and to work for improvement. We want excellent public schools for all our

children.”310 Earlier in the year, Halladey attracted attention to her cause with an Op-Ed

excoriating the San Francisco Chronicle for presenting a skewed depiction of the city’s

“beleaguered” public schools. “We need to stop scaring people away from the public

schools and, instead, support efforts to improve them,” she urged.311 Shortly thereafter,

the Zellerbach Family Fund provided funding for Halladey to attend a conference

sponsored by Parents for Public Schools, a national organization founded in Jackson,

Mississippi with local chapters throughout the country.312 Soon after the conference, the

San Francisco chapter was established. For Halladey, her work with PPS-SF was

informed by her personal politics. “I really believe strongly that public education is the

foundation of democracy, and if we have good public schools, then a lot of the other

problems kind of go away later,” she stated. “It might be a little bit naïve, but I think it’s

a very political decision. And I was really disturbed that in progressive San Francisco so

many people that were really right on politically and wearing their politics on their

sleeves would then send their kids to very expensive private schools, and I just saw such

a disconnect in that.”313

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PPS-SF was founded right as the district was transitioning from a student

assignment system based on race conscious subgroup enrollment caps to the race neutral

Diversity Index. Much of the work of PPS-SF involved helping parents understand and

navigate the student assignment process so that they could make the best possible choice

for their children and pushing the district’s Educational Placement Center (EPC) to make

its work more parent-friendly. This was certainly an important niche waiting to be filled.

For years, the procedure to enroll children had been labor intensive. In the past, rather

than employing a more orderly process, alternative schools considered new students on a

rolling basis. This led parents to camp overnight on school grounds days before

registration began.314 But even after the EPC eliminated the practice, between identifying

schools, visiting them, and filling out the OER application, parents were required to

devote countless hours of work to the enrollment process.315 In addition, advocates

criticized the EPC for not doing enough outreach and education to parents. “There was no

desire to really recruit families into the public schools,” said Halladey.316 The OER

program, though widely used by many parents, remained a mystery for others because of

language barriers and insufficient community education. Once the Diversity Index was in

place, it created its own tension because its purpose and the way it worked were so

ambiguous and confusing, stated Hydra Mendoza, a school board commissioner who was

formerly executive director of PPS-SF.317 In addition to an opaque application process,

the consensus among San Franciscans was that SFUSD had only a handful of good

schools, when the reality was, at least in the minds of district officials and PPS-SF

members, there were many good schools that operated under the radar of parents.318 “I

just knew that there was a huge opportunity and potential to recruit families into the

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public schools and explain the application process, because there was so much confusion

about it,” recalled Halladey. “So, I was just sort of like a squeaky wheel, saying, ‘You

need to do this. You need to do that.’ And no one was listening.”319

The task was clear. “We needed to really change the public perception of our

public schools and really get people to start enrolling their kids,” recalled Zacharin. “That

was the first step to school reform… everybody embracing the schools and sending their

kids [to public schools].”320 The organization set out to identify “Hidden Gems” in the

district—schools that were on the rise that parents might otherwise overlook. In time,

PPS-SF grew into a well-regarded intermediary. On behalf of the district, the

organization promoted public school options to parents and helped them with the

application process. On behalf of parents, the organization provided information to the

school board and the district on the concerns and priorities of the community. With this

scope of work, PPS-SF saw itself as a “critical friend of the district,” working to catalyze

improvement rather than merely serving as its publicity arm.321

Very early on in the organization’s history, Sandra Halladey’s personal view of

student assignment shifted. The lack of support among many of her neighbors for the

local public school initially led her to establish PPS-SF. “We should have neighborhood

schools,” Halladey recalled thinking. “Why are there people from my neighborhood,

there’s ten kids on the street, why aren’t they all going to Alvarado? Why are they going

to Rooftop or Claire Lilienthal or Clarendon or this private school or that private school?

Why aren’t we all going to our local school?”322 But as she began to examine the issue

“from an education policy standpoint,” she came to a different conclusion:

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I realized that it’s not fair to have neighborhood schools, and realized that it can’t

just be about where you can afford to live. So, I really changed. And then, I met

people all over the city who really wanted to have choices. So, I actually changed,

really changed my position a lot once I got to know more about the subject. I

think it’s a very easy call to say “We want neighborhood schools” if you’re not

really looking at the whole picture.323

The shift in position was solidified at the PPS national conference. There, Halladey met

some community organizers from the South who were African American. She recalled a

conversation where they advised her: “You know, you shouldn’t be talking about

neighborhood schools, that’s segregation. You really need to get educated on this.” As

with CADC, PPS-SF professed a desire that school quality improve. But rather than

advancing a strict neighborhood logic for student assignment, PPS-SF set its sights on

improving school quality districtwide with the recognition that choice—including the

choice for a neighborhood school— was an important value for parents.324

Over time, public school choice became a legitimate and increasingly central component

to student assignment in San Francisco. Under Horseshoe, the Temporary Attendance

Permit was understood to be a loophole, exploited by parents as a means to bypass the

district’s desegregation effort. With Educational Redesign, choice coupled with an

infusion of several new alternative and magnet schools, became the voluntary

desegregation complement to a designated schools system. While students were assigned

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to schools based on home address (primarily neighborhood-based, but with several “jump

zones” in order to ensure compliance with the enrollment caps), Optional Enrollment

Requests (OERs) allowed parents to choose alternate schools. In the first decade of the

decree, during the 1980s, the enrollment caps were tightly enforced. OERs were not to be

approved if they had an impact on either the sending or receiving school’s racial

identifiability. But in the second decade of the decree, the constraints of the enrollment

caps were much looser. With the second phase of the consent decree, under the Diversity

Index, choice became the centerpiece of student assignment. No initial assignment were

made and all students were expected to choose the schools they wished to attend. Choice

was constrained by non-race diversity factors as a means of compliance with the consent

decree’s (still in effect) mandate to eliminate racial identifiability. But choice was the

central component, nonetheless.

In 2004, reflecting on the history of student assignment, Henry Der lamented the

limited success of the SFUSD in integrating its schools. Because the “forces of

resegregation” may be too difficult to overcome, the district must instead determine how

to make the best of the situation. Choice has a role, he offered, if San Francisco could

figure out how parental choice could be “leveraged” to create strong schools throughout

the city.325 Current PPS-SF executive director Ellie Rossiter agrees, remarking: “Every

parent will say that they prefer to have a quality school in their neighborhood, but if they

don’t, they’d rather choose something else. And it doesn’t matter what neighborhood or

what parent you’re talking to, almost every single one of them will choose that. Those

who say they want neighborhood schools are also choosing, they just happen to be

choosing their neighborhood school. So, choice is a big priority for families.”326

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Neighborhood Schools

I think everyone agrees it has to work better, but the simplest thing to do is not going to be the best thing for kids, in the board’s opinion and in my opinion. Right? Neighborhood schools. I mean, it’s not even that simple, because there’s lots of neighborhoods that have way more kids than school space, there’s a lot of neighborhoods that have way more school space than kids. And so, someone’s going to get juggled in there somewhere. — Ruth Grabowski, Parents Advisory Council It's a sort of bread and butter issue— it's like apple pie and the American way. You say neighborhood schools, and it resonates with everybody—Arlene Ackerman, Superintendent of Schools.327 The position of Ho and the court was that the actual crafting of a new student assignment

system rested with the district.328 As long as the conditions laid out by the revised consent

decree were met, the district could determine a system of its own choosing. The solution,

the Diversity Index, relied on six race neutral diversity factors that would, ideally,

achieve the goal of eliminating segregation or identifiability throughout the system.

While settlement was an appropriate solution for the Ho parties, it created rifts

throughout the broader community, particularly among constituents who favored a

neighborhood assignment system and who viewed the Diversity Index as a less than ideal

resolution to the enrollment caps called for in the original version of the consent decree.

Over time, frustration with the Diversity Index only increased, with a large part of the

opposition coming from proponents of neighborhood schools.329

Some objected to the Diversity Index by dismissing the six indicators as nothing

more than proxies for using race.330 “On the surface this plan is indistinguishable from a

program based on race,” wrote one such parent in a letter to the court. “I think the result

will be to continue denying white children an equal chance to participate in San Francisco

schools and create new segments of children denied access, such as black children who

do not qualify for lunch subsidies.”331 This did not pose a concern for Ho, though. “I

think we were willing to accept fairly obvious proxies for race, because we weren’t trying

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to stop them from having a diverse school system,” remarked Daniel Girard. “We were

just trying to stop them from assigning students based on race.”332 Furthermore, the court

determined that the legal standard for challenging a facially race neutral plan had not

been met. “There is no evidence here that the factors chosen by the District for its

diversity index correlate so strongly with race that they cannot be explained as anything

but a proxy for race,” wrote Orrick. “Each of the factors chosen by the District for use in

its diversity index can apply to students of any race or ethnicity.”333

The decision to settle and the terms of the settlement that allowed for the

Diversity Index to be implemented was an issue for debate within CADC and AALF.

Contention was, at least in part, generated from Ho’s “double prong” approach, whereby

first CADC and then AALF would focus on building political and community support

while Daniel Girard and his team had final say on the legal strategy that would best serve

the class.334 For some CADC and AALF members, a trial was risky. While in all

likelihood Ho would prevail and the enrollment caps would be eliminated, a trial win

might have jeopardized the state desegregation funds attached to the consent decree.

“Cutting off our nose to spite our face,” was how CADC and AALF board member

Henry Louie described this possible outcome. “The loss of $35 million [would] affect all

the students in the district.”335 However, others argued that the state desegregation

funding had been misspent and had done little over the last decade and a half to close the

achievement gap.336 In addition, the prospect of proceeding with a trial was appealing to

some. “This was always supposed to be a Supreme Court fight. That was the hope. And

we had the legal issues to take it all the way there,” stated AALF board member Lee

Cheng. “Signing off [i.e., deferring to counsel] on settling Ho was probably the biggest

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regret of my legal career.”337 (Girard agrees with Cheng on the import of the case: “I

think the Supreme Court would have loved to get their hands on this case.”)

Support for a neighborhood-based system from CADC and AALF was expressed

through a framework of school choice: parents should be allowed the option to choose the

public school their child attends, presumably through their housing choices. Although the

Diversity Index asked parents to select up to five (and eventually, seven schools), the

choice was constrained by the seven diversity indicators. “The proposed enrollment

policy over emphasizes diversity and sacrifices parental choice and the integrity concept

of neighborhood schools,” wrote CADC education committee chair Victor Seeto to Judge

Orrick. “The assignment system is not neutral or even-handed… It is biased against the

middle class. Its potential disruptiveness can lead to an exodus of middle class parents

from the school as had been demonstrated by the departure of white pupils from the

school since the 80s.”338 Similarly, Henry Louie, then vice-president of AALF, expressed

“grave concerns regarding the District’s proposed student assignment plan.” SFUSD “is

under the misguided belief that its latest machination at social engineering via student

assignment by diversity index, will improve the academic achievement of heretofore

poorly performing students,” wrote Louie to the court. “The District may have social and

political motives and agendas to use its Diversity Index plan. However, these agendas

and motives should not run counter to widely held and proven pedagogy for educational

achievement and excellence: parental choice and parental and community involvement in

our children’s education.”339

Apprehension with the Diversity Index emerged from other sectors. Naomi Gray,

a parent advocate and president of the Urban Institute for African American Affairs, had

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worked for years with African American families in Bayview-Hunters Point.340 Gray,

along with prominent community activist Espanola Jackson, Bayview-Hunters Point

Democratic Club president Harvey Matthews, and former Parents Association president

for Gloria R. Davis Academic Middle School Diane Mooring, argued for the dissolution

of the consent decree because so little had been accomplished to improve the quality of

schools in the neighborhood. The parties “failed to get input from the community before

deciding to file for an extension,” wrote Gray on behalf of the others. “The NAACP has

been as negligent as the School District in keeping parents and community aware of the

progress or lack of progress.”341 This had been an ongoing issue in the neighborhood.

Several years earlier, Gray delivered a statement to the Health, Family, and Environment

Committee of the Board of Supervisors severely rebuking the district and the SFNAACP.

Despite a consent decree that funneled resources and attention to the Bayview-Hunters

Point neighborhood, the situation remained dire.342 African American students were

among “the lowest underachievers in the District,” according to Gray, with a mean grade

point average of 1.9. “The NAACP is responsible for playing along with the District

making the Consent Decree useless,” she testified. “It’s time to make the Consent Decree

meet its mandate by putting extra money in the Bayview to upgrade schools and increase

parent participation.”343

The first cohort of Diversity Index students was assigned in the spring of 2002.

Most of the 16,000 (primarily students entering the gateway grades of kindergarten, sixth

grade, and ninth grade) received one of their top choices. And many families that

requested neighborhood schools were accommodated.344 “It all worked out,” remarked

relieved parent Concepcion Segarra after successfully enrolling her twins at Buena Vista.

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“I think we have to remember that we live in a big city and have to deal with bureaucracy

at every turn.” 345 But many parents were unsatisfied or confused with the Diversity

Index. The assignment system developed for the original consent decree adopted

neighborhood attendance boundaries, allowing parents to anticipate school assignment

(and to request, if so desired, an optional enrollment).346 Under the default plan, in place

from 1999 to 2002, while enrollment caps were eliminated, school attendance boundaries

were maintained. For the Diversity Index, applicants to schools with attendance areas

(i.e., non-alternative schools) were considered in two waves. Those living within a

school’s attendance boundary were considered first, and assigned as long as seats were

available and “the students contribute[d] to the diversity of the school based on the

diversity factors.”347 If, after this wave, open seats remained, all students requesting the

school would be considered.348 So while the neighborhood attendance zones were

preserved, the ability to anticipate school assignment was lost, particularly for the top-

scoring, popular schools in the west side of the city that would receive as many as five

applications for every available seat. Unsurprisingly, this upset families who had made

housing decisions based on neighborhood school preferences.

After the first cohort of Diversity Index assignments were made in the spring, the

consent decree monitor urged the district to provide more clarity on the system and to

make the process more user friendly: “Throughout the course of our systematic

monitoring efforts this past spring, we found that many district officials, school site

administrators, teachers, and parents had great difficulty understanding the basic

procedures and requirements of the new system.”349 In particular, accessible information

on the Diversity Index had failed to adequately reach many low-income African

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American and Latino families living in the east side neighborhoods, who

disproportionately failed to meet the enrollment deadline, thus limiting their access to

popular schools. The monitor urged the district to redouble its community education,

outreach, and counseling efforts to improve participation.350 But variation in enrollment

participation rates would remain a troubling issue in the years to come.

During the summer prior to the 2002-2003 school year, pressure from west side

neighborhoods, particularly from Chinese American families, was mounting. At the

center of contention was the lack of space available at the two west side high schools:

Lincoln in the Sunset District, and Washington in the Richmond District. In a scheme that

was described by political observers as “bizarre”351 and “pandering,”352 San Francisco

Supervisor Leland Yee, who formerly served two terms on the school board, proposed an

east-west split of the school district. The resulting small district on the east side, home to

the majority of low-performing schools, would enroll predominantly low-income Latino,

Asian, and black students; the resulting district on the west side, with the majority of

high-achieving schools, would enroll predominantly middle class white and Chinese

students. “What he is pushing is transparently racist, reprehensible and un-San

Franciscan,” wrote Al Magary, former president of the Lowell High School PTA.353 Yee,

a candidate for the California state assembly district that included the west side of San

Francisco, initially announced his proposal only to the Chinese language media.

“Over the last 16 years, give or take a few, the San Francisco Unified School

District has been one of the most, if not the most integrated school district in the

country,” said Michael Harris of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights. “This proposal

now going forward would have the opposite effect.” 354 Yee’s proposal, dismissed in a

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Chronicle editorial as “not worthy of serious consideration,” was quickly countered by a

resolution carried by Supervisor Mark Leno, himself a candidate for a state assembly

district that included the east side of San Francisco.355 Leno’s resolution called on the

Board of Supervisors to support “a unified school district, not a divided one,” to

encourage efforts to “maintain diversity in our schools and achieve educational equity for

all youth,” and to support “a school district policy of parental choice, allowing all

children access to any school in the district when possible.”356 The resolution was

unanimously adopted by the Board of Supervisors (even Yee voted for it) and approved

by Mayor Willie Brown. Although talk of a split district continued, even Yee eventually

acknowledged that such a move would never gain the necessary traction.357

The following year, the Diversity Index was tweaked such that students who

qualify for multiple schools were assigned to their most preferred school (rather than the

school to which they contribute the most grade-level diversity).358 The district also made

a concerted effort to improve its responsiveness and streamline the process of enrollment.

But as with the first year of implementation, substantial numbers of students were

unhappy with their placement. Throughout the spring of 2003, from March until May,

school board meetings took place in front of overflow crowds of parents, advocates, and

students. Several times the audience reached into the hundreds, necessitating makeshift

overflow rooms. As in its debut year, for the 2003-2004 school year, most students were

assigned to a school of their choice, and many received their first choice school.359 But

for some families, the system was still flawed.

As was the case in the previous year, the predominant challengers to the Diversity

Index were Chinese American families from the west side of San Francisco. Many felt

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that, like the enrollment caps before, the current system was discriminatory. “Why is it

every year that the people who get hurt are the Asian people,” complained Sam Low at a

school board meeting. “The Diversity Index is not fair.”360 In agreement was John Shek:

“It’s 99 percent Asian children that get assigned to schools away from their

neighborhood.”361 At an April meeting, the school board made further modifications,

including revising assignments so that elementary and middle school students were

assigned to schools within two miles of their home.362 John Zhao, a parent advocate who

for several months was the de facto spokesperson for the demonstrators, was hopeful that

if a resolution could be found for the early grades, the district would eventually find a

resolution for high school.363 Rallying outside of the Board chambers, Zhao called on

elementary and middle school parents to stand united in protest. He asked if high school

parents should submit to the school district’s assignments. In unison, the crowd shouted,

“We do not accept!”364

“I understand and I recognize the fact that the placement of the students in

various high schools is the issue,” Ackerman explained to a group of Chinese American

parents. “I don’t know if there is anything I could do to make everyone happy. But I hope

we can find a place where the parents are happy with their children’s placements.”365

Parents focused on two high-achieving high schools in the west side of the city,

Washington in the Richmond District and Lincoln in the Sunset District. While just over

one-third of the district’s rising ninth graders were Chinese American, nearly half of the

incoming frosh at Washington and three-fifths of the incoming frosh at Lincoln were

Chinese American.366 But not everyone could be accommodated. Each received several

thousand enrollment requests for fewer than 600 spaces.367 And despite complaints that,

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in an effort to diversify, many students from outside the neighborhood were assigned to

these schools, nearly 80 percent of Lincoln’s incoming class lived in the school’s

attendance area.368

By the end of April, the situation intensified as positions hardened. At a special

school board hearing on student assignment, Zhao’s group of parents successfully halted

the proceedings. Several proponents of the new assignment system were shouted down

with chants of “We want neighborhood schools! We want neighborhood schools!”369

Students who came to speak about their positive experience at the less popular Balboa

faced jeers. “It is unfortunate that in their single-minded determination to allow only

those who shared their viewpoint to be heard last night, the parents prevented those who

might have been willing to explore other options from receiving any useful information,”

remarked Dana Woldow, whose son was to speak on behalf of Balboa but decided

otherwise after observing the crowd’s reaction.370 Caroline Grannan concurred, urging

the protestors to “do some soul-searching and rethink their strategy,” after her son was

shouted down at the meeting.371 (Both Grannan and Woldow were active members of

PPS-SF.) In May, upon hearing that the school district was planning a $295 million

school facilities bond initiative, between 75 and 100 parents confronted Ackerman at her

district office, demanding and receiving a meeting with her and her staff. One angry

parent asked, “If my child cannot attend neighborhood school, why is SFUSD asking us

to support education bonds?”372 The meeting became more heated, and accounts of what

happened next vary.373 Ackerman reported that parents grabbed her clothing and yelled at

her as she attempted to leave a rapidly escalating situation. Zhao reported never seeing a

parent touch the superintendent. The police were called, as were Board of Education

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Commissioners Emilio Cruz and Eddie Chin, to speak to the parents and monitor the

meeting. “We understand that they are passionate about [the enrollment process],” a

shaken Ackerman remarked. “But the behavior was just so unacceptable and out of

control.”374

While parents obviously had their children’s interests in mind, there was “an ugly

undercurrent of racism from some members of the group,” editorialized the Chronicle.375

Ackerman labeled a few as racists who opposed their assignments because of negative

stereotypes of black and Latino students. Over the course of the neighborhood schools

campaign, “they've said racist things I hadn't heard since the late sixties,” Ackerman

stated. “Talking about ‘In that neighborhood, my child might be raped!’”376 In the

beginning, “it was sort of untethered,” recalled former special assistant to the

superintendent Matt Kelemen:

There were people who would come up to the microphone and talk about ‘those

people’ on the other side of town and they would talk, there were some really

nasty racial insults hurled around. So, people were not very schooled in how to

sort of make a case that would be acceptable to a wider audience… By the second

year, that was all gone and it was all about just neighborhood and proximity and

being a family and caring for elderly grandparents and all the kinds of stories that

people had.377

“It's there,” remarked Ackerman. “Just below the liberal surface there is this sort of

insidious racist stuff that goes on around ethnicity.” Part of the problem was that the

district hadn’t adequately “educated parents about why we have a desegregation plan or

about other neighborhoods,” said commissioner Eric Mar, concerned about the

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propagation of an unfair characterization of Chinese parents. “This is a culture clash

between an African American superintendent who came from outside the district and

parents who have concerns about their children's safety, the quality of some of the

schools, and who want their kids close to home.”378

Over the summer, Zhao’s loose association of Chinese American parents split in

two. Several decided to form Parents for Neighborhood Schools Association (PFNSA);

others were wary of formal structure and remained with Zhao.379 Ahead of a school

boycott planned by both PFNSA and Zhao’s group, Ackerman offered to meet once more

with parents who had yet to accept a school assignment offer by the district. Zhao’s group

accepted the offer and agreed to back out of the boycott. Many of these parents

acquiesced to a Galileo assignment once the district agreed to send a school bus to pick

up their children. PFNSA, however, went forward with the boycott, and 58 of their

parents vowed to keep their children out of school until space was made available for

them at Lincoln or Washington. “We will wait every day until we get our school,”

PFNSA vice president Catherine Chan promised.380 A couple dozen PFNSA families

sustained the boycott until it was called off in early October following a compromise with

the district that sent some students to Galileo and others to a charter school in the Sunset

and another in the Excelsior neighborhood.381 Looking back on the campaign, Zhao

remarked: “Brown v. Board of Education is not applicable in today’s San Francisco. It’s

not a racial issue, it’s a fairness issue: [Chinese Americans] are forced out of our own

neighborhood.”382

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District initiatives, STAR & Dream Schools

While Ackerman was contending with overenrolled schools in the west side

neighborhoods of the city, she was also seeking ways to improve the academic

performance of underenrolled schools on the east side. Several programs, large and small,

were implemented during the first several years of Ackerman’s tenure, all in an effort to

improve the underperforming schools in the eastern neighborhoods of San Francisco.383

“There's not one answer to how you improve academic achievement,” said Elois Brooks,

SFUSD’s chief academic officer. “Real change will come when we get the right

combination of things.”384 Ackerman incorporated a weighted student formula budgeting

system in Excellence for All.385 There were two key aspects to the plan. First, a dollar

amount was calculated for each student. Those that tended to be more expensive to

educate—poor students, English learners, and special education students, for example—

brought additional funds to the schools that enrolled them. Second, the system afforded

some control over school budgets to site councils comprised of principals, teachers, and

parents. If an issue arose that was particular to a school (say, the need to improve English

Language Arts scores), its site council could more nimbly respond (by purchasing

additional materials). The program was piloted at Bret Harte Elementary in Bayview-

Hunters Point. “The people who are the closest to the kids are given power to make

decisions,” stated impressed Bret Harte Principal Cheryl Curtis. “I don't think parents had

ever been treated with such respect.” The plan was also welcomed by public education

advocates. “I think it's very exciting,” remarked Sherrie Rosenberg, President of the San

Francisco PTA. “It will be a lot of work for those on the site council, but they will have

the ability to decide how funds are spent so that children are well served.”386 And while

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union leaders may have originally been circumspect, they raised no serious objections

with the plan.387

A second program component of Excellence for All, Students and Teachers

Achieving Results (STAR), sought to “increase student achievement at underperforming

schools by providing targeted interventions at the school sites.”388 By 2002, 39 schools

located primarily in the eastern neighborhoods of San Francisco had been placed into the

program.389 Some but not all of these schools were also targeted for assistance by the

consent decree. “The real distinction, as I see it, is that STAR Schools classifications look

at issues of performance whereas the Consent Decree is looking more at vestiges of

discrimination,” remarked Matt Kelemen, special assistant to the superintendent.390

STAR schools benefited from supplementary personnel, extra support from the district

central office, and various additional resources.391 STAR was hailed as a successful

strategy.392 But the program did not foster greater interest in these schools from non-

neighborhood parents. “The mandate of the decree has always included desegregation as

a strategy for improving education quality as well as maximizing equal educational

opportunity,” cautioned the consent decree monitor. “We urge the members of this

taskforce and the relevant district officials to develop and implement forceful, concrete

steps that directly address current resegregation patterns.”393

Dream Schools, back-to-basics approach

In March 2004, the consent decree monitor filed a supplemental report to the court

describing the failure of the district to meet the goals of the consent decree. The number

of schools severely segregated was larger than previously anticipated and there was no

indication that the trend would reverse in the near future. Data addressing the consent

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decree’s goal of academic achievement was equally startling. The monitor noted that as a

group, African American students in San Francisco performed worse than their African

American counterparts in other urban districts across the state.394 In response, Judge

Alsup held an evidentiary hearing in August and set a September deadline for parties to

propose changes that would increase racial diversity.395 “But no one came forward with a

motion to modify the student assignment plan,” stated Alsup. “The same discredited

diversity index was left in place.”396

Instead, the district focused on closing the achievement gap by moving forward

on an initiative that had been announced earlier in the year. Dream Schools was a

controversial initiative to improve the performance of the most troubled schools in the

east side neighborhoods of the city. The schools were framed as a “back-to-basics” effort

that entailed longer school days (including some Saturday classes), college preparatory

coursework, tutoring, and college and career planning services. Parents would be asked to

sign a “contract” pledging their support and students would be required to wear

uniforms.397 Dream schools will give “private school educational opportunities for public

school students,” Superintendent Ackerman proclaimed.398 For its inaugural year, three

schools in Bayview-Hunters Point were selected.399 Although children from anywhere in

San Francisco could enroll, seventy percent of the students lived in the neighborhood.

“She didn’t think that schools had to be integrated,” longtime district employee and

consultant Hoover Liddell surmised. “She felt as though even if they were segregated, if

they did get the good education, that kids could learn.”400 In her words, “if our children

are going to go to segregated schools let them be the best schools we can give them.”401

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Dream School positions were open to staff throughout the district. Akin to

reconstitution, current staff at the three new Dream Schools were required to reapply for

their jobs. (Although unlike Reconstitution under the Rojas administration, in which

displaced teachers had no guarantee to open jobs elsewhere in the district, current staff

not hired for Dream School positions would be offered similar positions elsewhere in the

district.) Officials with the United Educators of San Francisco (UESF) were initially

opposed to the requirement. “The teachers are not the problem, and that's the implication

of this,” stated Linda Plack, vice president of UESF. “It's such a slap in the face to all the

dedicated people who go to those schools day in and day out and do a wonderful job.”402

However, the union acquiesced once community leaders and teachers from the

neighborhood offered the school board a strong show of support for the initiative. “Where

were you when they kept getting low test scores? Where was the union then?” wondered

the Reverend Carolyn Habersham of Allen Chapel AME Church. “You're talking about

teachers being stigmatized. We're talking about our children being stigmatized.”403

Despite a rough beginning, three Dream Schools opened with a flourish in fall

2004 and the initiative was folded into the consent decree (thus making it mandatory).404

The initiative will “bring a ray of light back to the community, something families can be

hopeful about,” proclaimed SFUSD Dream School manager and Bayview native

Tamitrice Rice Mitchell.405 School board commissioner Dan Kelly remarked “Some of

the most talented children and valuable children in the city live right here in Bayview-

Hunters Point. We cannot afford to leave them behind and have them fail.”406

Understandably, proponents of neighborhood schools from the west side also had reason

to applaud the initiative. “We’re for Dream Schools, Dream Schools are neighborhood

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schools,” testified Ed Jew, an organizer with Parents for Neighborhood Schools (an

advocacy organization for Chinese families in the Sunset District) and a CADC board

member. “There’s a commitment from the parents and so the kids could actually build

within the community… We [should] make sure that every school is the same as those

schools that are on the west side or east side, wherever they are.”407

Soon after the start of the school year, an additional seven Dream Schools were

announced for other east side neighborhoods.408 “The significance of the Dream School

effort is to provide the same kind of high-quality education that exists in other parts of the

city,” Mayor Gavin Newsom remarked. “The notion is simple, isn't it? Community

involvement, parental involvement and developing a holistic approach to educating our

kids”409 There was excitement over the initiative. But it wasn’t universal. Dream Schools

became “political fodder,” recalled Carl Barnes, former president and board member of

the San Francisco PTA. “It wasn’t well-received, so it was kind of hard to take a position

on it, because any position that you took tended to put you at odds with somebody or

make you seem allied with somebody.”410 The top-down imposition of Dream Schools on

the neighborhood didn’t conform to the organizing model of Coleman Advocates for

Children and Youth, an influential organization. “These were not stakeholders from the

community… when you don’t have that initial investment, it’s very hard… to move

things forward,” remarked Sandra Lee Fewer, former director of education policy and

parent organizing. “And it’s a different philosophy, maybe, that I think some of us felt

about children and particularly black children.”411 Although the UESF didn’t oppose

Dream Schools, neither was it an entirely committed partner.412 Mere months after the

first schools opened, a dispute over the terms of the extended hours required of teachers

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became sore point between union and district leaders.413 Likewise, the school board was

divided in its view of Ackerman, with a bare majority backing her agenda.414 Ahead of

the 2004 election, she described the cleavage on the board. “One vote will determine

whether there will be a majority that continues to support the progress that we've made or

one that wants to see the district move in a very different direction,” Ackerman

remarked.415 Support for the superintendent grew tenuous following the defeat of

Ackerman proponent Heather Hiles and the re-election of Ackerman rival Eric Mar. The

following year, after plans for the second round of Dream Schools were held up by the

school board, district spokesperson Lorna Ho observed that the superintendent was “tired

of having to deal with all the political infighting.”416 Soon after the start of the school

year Ackerman announced her resignation. By then, every Dream School, save for one, was

“severely resegregated” at one or more grade levels (meaning a recognized subgroup

comprised of sixty percent or more of a cohort).417 And with its champion longer around,

once the consent decree ended, the initiative quietly fizzled out. “We were trying to do

something good by creating the Dream Schools in the Bayview,” remembered long time

school board commissioner Jill Wynns. “But I don’t think [we] had time to do what it

could have done.”418

In January 2005, the board of education elected Eric Mar president and Norman Yee

vice-president. As the school enrollment season began, a new coalition of Chinese

American families began a renewed call for neighborhood schools. With two Chinese

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Americans heading the school board and with the consent decree set to expire at the end

of the year, the opportunity for a something closer to a neighborhood based system for

the 2006-2007 term seemed like a real possibility. This will be “a pivotal year for the

Chinese community, particularly Chinese activists who are interest in this issue, to

mobilize,” remarked David Lee, executive director of the Chinese American Voters

Education Committee.419 In May, Commissioner Yee, in an unusual move, held a press

conference announcing a yet-to-be-voted-on student assignment proposal that would

reserve sixty percent of a school’s open seats to neighborhood children with the

remaining forty percent allotted based on factors meant to create diversity. “I think

Norman is simply pandering to NIMBY attitudes,” remarked commissioner Dan Kelly.

“It's a divisive tactic that will only make the task of unifying the school district more

difficult.”420 Reflecting on the issue of school assignment broadly, Yee had a different

view: “Between the neighborhood and the choice [logics], there’s opportunities to create

diversity. So, to me, it’s just a matter of trying to figure out something that can… satisfy

both parties.”421 What Yee proposed was similar to a 60-40 plan developed by a school

board-appointed community advisory committee on student assignment earlier in the

year. Based on simulations conducted for the advisory committee, Yee’s plan, depending

on the factors used and other details, had the potential of actually creating more

integration than the current Diversity Index, despite its set-aside for neighborhood

students. In fact, community organizations that were in support of integration—Chinese

for Affirmative Action, Coleman Advocates for Children and Youth, and Parents for

Public Schools— signaled their support for some sort of 60-40 plan.422 Public Schools,

Coleman Advocates for Children and Youth, and Chinese for Affirmative Action.

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But hope for any change to the student assignment system, much less a system

based on neighborhood schools, diminished over the summer when the district announced

that the Diversity Index would be in place for another school year and, with approval

from Ho, filed a request to extend the consent decree for an additional eighteen months,

to June 2007. With the district still developing a student assignment system to replace the

Diversity Index, with the continued expansion of the Dream and STAR schools

programs, and with the various other efforts dictated and funded by the consent decree,

an extension would allow for “an orderly transition from federal court jurisdiction,”

argued the district.423 The need for an extension became even more apparent when

Ackerman announced her resignation in September. “Educational reform efforts are still

in its infant stages and its student assignment process requires modification and further

Court supervision in order to succeed,” stated Christina Wong of Chinese for Affirmative

Action. “Without the Court’s supervision, it is highly unlikely that the Board will resolve

this issue in a timely manner, especially given Superintendent Ackerman’s recent

resignation from the San Francisco Unified School District.”424 Advocates for the African

American community concurred. “It is important to achieve a fair and inclusive student

assignment system,” wrote Reverend Calvin Jones, Pastor of Providence Baptist Church.

“I wholeheartedly support the programs and educational initiatives that further assist our

children in achieving an equal educational opportunity.” 425 Several parents supported

continuing the consent decree, not because they felt court supervision was necessary, but

because they favored the choice aspects of the Diversity Index. “It is because of the

diversity index that my son can get in a very good primary and middle school,” wrote

Sally Sok Man Chan, a parent living in a low-income neighborhood. “If we don’t have

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this diversity index then all the unwealthy families will always have no chance to get into

the good school districts and no chance to receive a higher quality education…We should

try to give any child to have the same education opportunities regardless of races &

wealth.”426

While parents and advocates representing the greater southeast section of San

Francisco argued for the continuation of the consent decree, most of the public comments

submitted to the court came from parents from the west side neighborhoods, “appearing

by name to be a further subgroup of the Ho class” (i.e., parents with Chinese surnames

who, unlike the Ho plaintiffs, opposed an extension of the decree).427 These parents

demanded the court honor the original expiration date of the consent decree based on

their preference for neighborhood schools. However, ending the consent decree did not

preclude the district from maintaining (or ending) the Diversity Index. As Judge Alsup

explained to a parent:

You need to be aware, and parents who feel the same way as you, you need to be

aware that even if the Federal Court completely is subtracted from this picture, the

school board has—and the school district have the perfect right, as far as I can

see, to continue with the Diversity Index, if they want. In other words, subtracting

the Federal Court from this picture does not mean that you are going to get what

you want.428

Although choice became the central means of assignment and racial diversity remained

the central goal (albeit through race neutral means following the 1999/2001 settlements),

strong support for neighborhood schools from both community stakeholders and the

school district remained an important aspect of the local political landscape throughout

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the course of the consent decree. The most vocal community proponents of a

neighborhood based system were parents—primarily middle class, primarily Chinese

American—residing in the western neighborhoods that were home to the district’s most

desirable schools. Support for neighborhood schools also emerged among African

Americans living in the southeastern neighborhoods that were home to the district’s least

desirable schools. And while the Ho settlements eliminated the use of racial

classifications in student assignment, the agreed upon student assignment plan, the

Diversity Index, left some parents as unsatisfied as they were under the prior enrollment

cap system.

Arlene Ackerman recognized the potency of the neighborhood schools logic and

instituted several programs to improve academic achievement for underserved students in

the absence of desegregation.“I think integrated schools provide the optimum learning

experience in which students learn to get along and get to know each other,” said

Ackerman. “But the truth is we live in this city, in neighborhoods segregated by race and

ethnicity, and many parents want their children to go to schools close to home.” 429 Of

course, STAR and Dream were not the first initiatives that focused on the low performing

schools clustered in the east side of town. Waldemar Rojas introduced the

Comprehensive School Improvement Program in 1993 and Robert Alioto developed the

special plan for Bayview-Hunters Point, first on an ad hoc basis before it was

institutionalized in the 1983 consent decree.

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“The greatest disappointment.”

And so the challenge before us and this court is: How can these assets be most fairly shared for the benefit of all the school children? And having a comprehensive and effective student assignment system can help determine that, because… public school educational assets, they belong to all the children of San Francisco. —Peter Cohn, SFNAACP Counsel430 As the decree has come to be used, the Court must pretend to supervise decisions better left in the hands of education professionals subject to the rough and tumble of local politics and government.— William H. Alsup, U.S District Judge431 “Everybody in this room wants to do what is best for the children of San Francisco—

that's a given,” observed Judge Alsup during an October public hearing to consider

whether the consent decree should be extended. But the question comes down to: “Who

is best equipped to make that decision—a trained professional like Arlene Ackerman or a

federal judge?” 432 Rather than filing a motion, counsel had instead submitted a

stipulation and proposed order to the court to amend the consent decree by extending its

termination date for a second time.433 The terms of the proposed settlement would

prohibit any adjustments to the Diversity Index prior to the fall 2006 and extend the

consent decree to June 30, 2007. While all parties agreed to the proposed modifications,

Alsup articulated multiple concerns.

No party had ever provided sufficient evidence that the school district was either

engaging or had ever engaged in intentional racial segregation. Indeed, when Orrick

approved the 1999 settlement he stated that “none of the parties to the litigation have

been able thus far to demonstrate that the current problems in the SFUSD have been

caused by the prior governmental discrimination that justified the adoption of the Consent

Decree in 1983.”434 The Ninth Circuit made clear that a primary issue for trial was

whether or not vestiges of segregation or discrimination remained in the SFUSD.435 But

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since the parties settled a trial was never held, leaving the issue unresolved. “A federal

judge is trained to make sure that the law is obeyed,” said Alsup. “But the anchor for the

federal court’s involvement in the first place is supposed to be that at some point in the

past there was a proven violation of the law.”436

Despite an absence of proof that the consent decree was justified, all parties were

complicit in its maintenance. The SFNAACP saw the decree as a means toward

educational equity, the state defendants had no objection to it, and neither did Ho—as

long as the student assignment process was constitutional. Most significantly, the SFUSD

had come to rely on the consent decree and the mandate it provided. “The school district

wants to support it because they like having the 800 pound gorilla to deal with the

teachers union, and if it comes to it, the board,” remarked Alsup. “I know that’s what’s

going on.”437 The consent decree had drifted too far, the judge argued. Even if it ever had

in the past, the consent decree no longer remedied vestiges of racism or segregation. As

Alsup saw it, the modus operandi had become:

Counsel broker a deal for their clients. Then they write it into the decree. Then

they use the supremacy of the decree to override any opposition from parents,

teachers and other interests not represented in this suit. The checks and balances

of the traditional governmental and political processes are short-circuited.

Counsel and their clients have become a kind of supreme council able to fast-

track educational initiatives of their own choosing and to bypass concerns of those

unrepresented herein.438

Regardless if the school reform efforts mandated by the consent decree were improving

the academic achievement and educational opportunities for San Francisco’s children, it

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would be improper to maintain the decree any longer. “Excellent as it sounds, this

rhetoric has no anchor in the original source of the district court’s power to intrude upon

local government,” wrote Alsup. “What is best for the children of San Francisco should

be left to the professionals in the district, subject to the voices of all in the community,

whether or not they have a seat at counsel table.”439

Many agreed with Alsup. “We don’t need the court’s supervision anymore. It

should sunset this year,” testified Ed Jew, the Parents for Neighborhood Schools

organizer. “And I’m sorry to say, your honor, I mean your job is to be judge, but not as a

teacher, not as a superintendent not as a faculty member, but as a judge. And it’s time that

we move on.”440 But others saw real value in maintaining the decree. Although CADC

president Larry Yee acknowledged the burden the Diversity Index placed on families, he

announced the CADC education committee’s support for the decree’s extension because

of the stability it would bring in light of the changes taking place in the district: “Within

six months to a year the superintendent leaves. There’s also a school board that we are

not sure of which way they are going.”441 (There were several CADC members who

opposed the extension of the decree.) And Reverend Derrick Eva valued the consent

decree as a tool to direct financial resources to schools serving low-income students,

proclaiming, “It is a long-standing family, American, and democratic value to see that

limited resources are fairly shared with everyone.”442

Apart from the legal question of whether the consent decree should be maintained

was the issue of resegregation. “It has been the greatest disappointment to me over the

years,” stated Alsup. Because the Ho settlements led to the Diversity Index, “you could

point a finger at this court and say this district court has caused the resegregation in San

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Francisco.”443 Stuart Biegel, the consent decree monitor, had reported in April that for the

2004-2005 year, 43 schools (more than a third of the district’s schools) were severely

segregated at one or more grade levels. Of these, eleven schools had subgroup

percentages greater than 80 percent at one or more grade levels. Twenty seven were

severely segregated at the school level.444 The district had the highest percentage of

racially identifiable schools (schoolwide subgroup enrollment greater than 45 percent)

since the 1970-1971 term, just prior to the implementation of the Horseshoe plan.

Following the first nine years of the consent decree, under Superintendents Alioto,

Cornejo, and Cortines, the district was substantially in compliance with the school-by-

school component requiring the elimination of racial identifiability. Beginning in the

early 1990s, the district began a steady march back toward a segregated system that

accelerated once the Diversity Index was put in place (see Figure 7). “The decree has

transformed itself into court-ordered resegregation,”445 remarked Alsup. “Parents would

buy into the burden if it achieved desegregation, but it doesn't.”446 These were among the

principal reasons Alsup denied the request for an extension and ordered that the consent

decree end on December 31, 2005, as previously stipulated by the parties.447

Part Two has shown the politics of student assignment in San Francisco to be governed

by three logics of action: integration, choice, and neighborhood. Over the life of the

consent decree, as the district transitioned from an race conscious integration plan to a

race neutral diversity plan, the resonance of school choice was ascendant, and

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neighborhood school models attained varying degrees of endorsement. Each logic of

action was contested. Community stakeholders embraced and manipulated competing

cultural characterizations of integration, choice, and neighborhood. These cultural

characterizations became influential through their inclusion in political rhetoric, their

contribution to the legitimation of policy alternatives, and their constitution in prior

policy.

Integration. Opposing views regarding the appropriate means by which schools

were to be integrated led to political contest. During the first phase of the consent decree,

the enrollment caps maintained a race conscious student assignment system. A legacy of

Educational Redesign, the system defined a racially balanced school as one enrolling at

least four of the nine recognized racial and ethnic subgroups, with no subgroup

comprising more than 45 percent of the enrollment for a traditional school or 40 percent

of the enrollment for an alternative school. However, with the changing demographics of

the city, it became increasingly clear to many observers that the burden of the system fell

disproportionately on Chinese American students. This was most apparent in the

admissions process of Lowell High School. In order to maintain racial balance, students

who were Chinese American had to score higher to gain admission, solely on the basis of

being Chinese American. Institutional changes were occurring during this period of time.

School desegregation and affirmative action jurisprudence were evolving in ways that

placed severe limitations on the government use of racial classifications and encouraged

the return of court-supervised school districts to local control. These events took place

during a national dialogue on race (with California at the forefront) that mirrored the

direction the Supreme Court was travelling. A lawsuit filed on behalf of Chinese

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American students led to a 1999 settlement, reached on the morning of the scheduled

trial, that eliminated the use of racial classifications in student assignment. SFUSD

switched to a race neutral student assignment system, first through a default plan that

eliminated the enrollment caps and assignment priority for black and Latino students (but

did nothing else to the assignment system), and then through the Diversity Index Lottery.

Throughout the life of the consent decree, although the means were contested, the goal of

achieving racial balance remained.

Choice. By the 1980s, school choice had shed its negative association with the

freedom-of-choice plans popular in the South. Optional Enrollment Requests, the

voluntary desegregation component during the first phase of the consent decree, became

increasingly popular. Choice was an ancillary mechanism. All students were initially

assigned based on home address. In theory, the consent decree required that an OER

approval be made only if it would not adversely impact the racial balance of both the

sending and receiving school. This was by and large the case during the first decade of

the consent decree, when the district had the fewest number of segregated schools. By the

1990s, however, the district began resegregating. With the implementation of the

Diversity Index, choice moved from an ancillary mechanism to the central means of

assigning students to schools. Choice was constrained, of course, in an attempt to keep

the district integrated. The year Ho reached its first settlement, the San Francisco chapter

of Parents for Public Schools was founded by two parent organizers. Although the

founders began with an interest in revitalizing neighborhood schools, primarily as a

means of attracting middle class families who had left or were planning to leave public

schools, it quickly recognized the value many San Franciscans placed on school choice.

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Neighborhood. Following the Ho settlements, proponents of neighborhood

schools organized on opposite ends of San Francisco. In the western neighborhoods of

the Sunset and Richmond districts, primarily Chinese American parents fought to

preserve and increase access to their high achieving neighborhood schools, rather than

sending their children to other parts of the city, as the Diversity Index Lottery would

require for some parents. In the eastern neighborhood of Bayview-Hunters Point, a less

prominent group of African American parent advocates fought for neighborhood schools

with the added stipulation that resources and other efforts be increased to improve school

quality. During the second phase of the consent decree, the district was faltering on both

goals—eliminating racial identifiability and improving academic achievement. With the

arrival of Superintendent Arlene Ackerman in 2000, several programs were put in place

targeting Bayview-Hunters Point. The STAR schools initiative funneled resources to

underperforming schools and the Dream schools initiative reconstituted schools in favor

of a private school model. These efforts were not new. Under Rojas, similar efforts were

conducted under the CSIP program. And before Rojas, Alioto put in place programs

geared toward Bayview-Hunters Point that were eventually institutionalized with the

1983 approval of the consent decree.

January 1, 2006.

After more than 27 years, SFNAACP v. SFUSD was finally closed. For 22 of those years,

the court supervised and approved all public school assignments for San Francisco

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students through the consent decree. The Supreme Court had noted that “returning

schools to the control of local authorities at the earliest practicable date is essential to

restore their true accountability in our governmental system.”448 To emphasize the point

that San Francisco’s time had come, Judge Alsup wrote:

This action is the oldest case on the entire docket for the Northern District of

California. It has spanned more than one-tenth of our nation’s existence. It has

lasted nearly as long as the combined duration of all major wars against foreign

powers by the United States since the Revolutionary War. The consent decree

itself has lasted almost twice as long as the period of Reconstruction following the

Civil War. The entire educational careers of many students were spent under its

regime with their own children under it yet.449

Of course, the litigation history extended back even further, to June 24, 1970, when

Johnson v. SFUSD was filed. The SFNAACP charged the district with creating,

maintaining, and operating a dual system, Judge Stanley Weigel ordered the

desegregation of the district’s elementary schools, and the district began its first attempt

to address inequity through student assignment with the 1971 implementation of the

Horseshoe plan.

In the final week of 2005, Judge Alsup received a letter from David Johnson, the

named plaintiff in the 1969 lawsuit. Upon learning that the consent decree was allowed to

expire in part because the district was as segregated as it was three and a half decades

earlier, Johnson wrote: “I wish to bring to your attention the fact that African American

students in San Francisco Unified School District continue to receive an unconstitutional

education based on the precedents established in the Brown versus Board of Education. I

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fervently urge you to use your authority to compel the San Francisco Unified School

District to prioritize the welfare of its black students and to explain its [negligence].”450

Johnson wrote the letter on the same day Stuart Biegel issued his final report as

consent decree monitor. The disparities in academic achievement that had long plagued

the district persisted. And a review of Fall 2005 enrollment data indicated yet another

increase in the number of severely segregated schools. “We note again, as we have in

many of our recent reports, that we have found a direct relationship between this

resegregation and the disparities in academic achievement,” wrote Biegel. “The effect is

corrosive and widespread, impacting not only the quality of the education at individual

school sites, but also the culture of the community.” 451 Responding to the report,

outgoing Superintendent Arlene Ackerman remarked, “We can't solve [resegregation] as

a school district without the larger San Francisco community and the governmental

agencies and community organizations helping us.”452 With the expiration of the consent

decree, SFUSD embarked on a new era of local control. Biegel took notice of this and

closed his report with a plea to the district’s stakeholders to move beyond the political

standoffs that stalled past reform efforts: “We look forward to new and creative efforts

from local political leaders and from within both the legal community and the education

community that can… enable this great city to become the shining example of education

success that everyone knows it can be.” 453

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Notes

1. San Francisco Chronicle, “A Firing in the Night,” Editorial, July 26, 1985.

2. Carlos Cornejo served as the district’s Integration Director in the early 1970s and as Alioto’s Curriculum Coordinator thereafter. He went on to serve as the district’s Assistant Superintendent for Integration.

3. Declaration of Ramon Cortines. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF434, 8/24/1986).

4. Richard Cerbatos, Ben Tom, and Sodonia Wilson supported Jones; Rosario Anaya, Libby Denebeim, Myra Kopf, and JoAnne Miller supported Cortines. The actual vote, however, was 5-2, with Tom providing the fifth vote. Diane Curtis, “Selection of Schools Chief Upsets S.F. Black Leaders,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 1, 1986.

5. Cortines describes meetings with the Alliance of Black Educators, Black Agenda Council, Association of Chinese Administrators, Latin American Teachers Association, Black Women Administrators, San Francisco Nikkei association, Latino Caucus, and the Black Leadership Forum. Declaration of Ramon Cortines. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF434, 8/24/1986).

6. Nanette Asimov, “S.F. Blacks Angry at School Board,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 11, 1992.

7. Ibid..

8. Lily Eng, “School Board Shows Division in Two Split Votes,” San Francisco Examiner, January 11, 1989. The coalition consisted of Libby Denebeim, Myra Kopf, and JoAnne Miller.

9. San Francisco Independent, “Board of Ed Loses Senior Member,” December 21, 1988.

10. Interview, Steve Phillips, July 23, 2009. The 1988 school board consisted of Rosario Anaya, Libby Denebeim, Myra Kopf, Roderick McLeod, Joanne Miller, Fred Rodriguez, and Sodonia Wilson; The 1993 school board consisted of Tom Ammiano, Carlota Del Portillo, Angie Fa, Dan Kelly, Steve Phillips, Jill Wynns, and Leland Yee.

11. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶48.

12. Ibid., ¶12. The nine subgroups were: Spanish-surname, Other White, Black, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, American Indian, and Other Non-White.

13. Ibid., ¶13(a). The district set about to eliminate school-level racial identifiability following the implementation of the Consent Decree. Eliminating classroom- and program-level identifiability would prove to be a much more difficult task.

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14. Ibid., ¶13(b). The 5/20/1983 consent decree imposed a 40 percent camp on the following

alternative schools: Wallenberg High School, Lawton Middle School, International Studies, Second Community, San Francisco Community, Clarendon, New Traditions, Douglas Traditional, Argonne Elementary, Rooftop, Lilienthal, Lakeshore, Buena Vista, John Swett.

15. Ibid., ¶14. The 5/20/1983 Consent Decree imposed special subgroup caps on the following schools: Alamo Park (black, 44.9 ); Bret Harte (black, 43.0); Bryant (Spanish Surname, 42.5 ); Downtown (Spanish Surname, 40.0 ); Edison (Spanish Surname, 42.7 ); Garfield (Chinese, 41.2 ); George Moscone (Spanish Surname, 37.0 ); Hawthorne (Spanish Surname, 40.0 ); Horace Mann (Spanish Surname, 42.8 ); Jean Parker (Chinese, 42.7 ); John Muir (black, 43.5 ); John O'Connell (Spanish Surname, 44.5 ); Junipero Serra (Spanish Surname, 40.8 ); Leonard Flynn (Spanish Surname, 43.2 ); Marina (Chinese, 43.6 ); Spring Valley (Chinese, 41.7 ); Sutro (Chinese, 39.4 ); William Cobb (black, 43.4 ); William de Avila (black, 41.0).

16. Ibid., ¶13(c).

17. Local Defendants 1984-85 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 395, 8/1/85). George Washington Carver had a black enrollment of 61.6 percent; Alternative schools New Traditions had a white enrollment of 41.5 percent and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. had a black enrollment of 41.1 percent.

18. Local Defendants 1988-89 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF546, 8/1/89). The schools out of compliance were: Bay High School (67.5 percent black); G.W. Carver (45.8percent black); Galileo (44.9 percent Chinese); Raphael Weill (44.1 percent black); and, Newcomer (43.4 percent Chinese).

19. Ibid.; Of the 915 elementary classrooms with twenty or more students, 128 did not have students from at least four subgroups. Of the 6,456 secondary classrooms, 376 did not have students from at least four subgroups.

20. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶17-30.

21. Phase I Schools (7/1984): (Dr. Charles R. Drew, Sir Francis Drake, and George Washington Carver Elementary Schools, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Academic Middle School and Horace Mann Middle Schools, and Phillip and Sala Burton High School). King and Burton were entirely new schools. The remaining four were reconstituted.

22. J. Muir (1988); J. Lick (1988); B. Harte (1994); Visitacion Valley (1994); Edison (1995); R. Parks (1995); Aptos (1996); Balboa (1996); Starr King (1996); Golden Gate (1997); and Mission (1997). Wilson was dismantled in 1994.

23. Phase II Schools (2/1986): James Lick, Potrero Hill, Visitacion Valley; Phase III Schools (7/1986): Alvarado, Commodore Stockton, DeAvila, E.R. Taylor, Galileo, Glen Park, Golden Gate, Raphael Weill, Wilson; Phase IV Schools (9/1988): Webster, Bret Harte, Edison, Flynn. These and other desegregation-related activities were funded by the state.

24. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 34, ¶39.

25. Significant gains were not observed for students attending Phase II-IV schools. Basic Information About School Reconstitution, Waldemar Rojas to All CSIP Participants (Memo), May 8, 1995. In Report by Local Defendants. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF839, 8/15/95).

26. San Francisco Examiner, “S.F. Schools’ Success Story,” Editorial, August 18, 1989.

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27. Professor Gary Orfield was a member of the team that negotiated the settlement in the fall of

1982.

28. Gary Orfield to the Court. October 14, 1991. In Unpublished Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD. (DF662, 11/8/91).

29. Ibid.

30. Ibid.

31. The Committee was chaired by Professor Gary Orfield, and included Barbara L. Cohen, Gordon Foster, Robert L. Green, Paul Lawrence, David S. Tatel, and Fred Tempes. Desegregation and Educational Change in San Francisco—Findings and Recommendations on Consent Decree Implementation. SFNAACP v. SFUSD ( DF673, 6/26/1992); Nanette Asimov, “S.F. Schools Criticized on Teaching of Minorities,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 27, 1992.

32. Stuart Biegel, “Court-Mandated Education Reform: The San Francisco Experience and the Shaping of Educational Policy after Seattle-Louisville and Ho v. SFUSD,” Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties, 4 (2008): 159-216.

33. The consent decree monitor noted that CTBS test scores for black and Latino students showed “little or no significant progress” from 1986 to 1992. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, 6. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF865, 9/29/97); See also Waldemar Rojas to All CSIP Participants (Memo). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF839, 8/15/95).

34. Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF754, 4/30/1993).

35. Local Defendants’ 1997-98 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF873, 7/31/98).

36. Desegregation and Educational Change in San Francisco—Findings and Recommendations on Consent Decree Implementation, 6. SFNAACP v. SFUSD ( DF673, 6/26/1992).

37. Local Defendants’ 1997-98 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF873, 7/31/98).

38. Brief of Objections. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF750, 4/22/1993).

39. Peter Schmidt, “Language Minorities Seek Place,” Education Week, February 17, 1993.

40. Notice by Intervenor-Plaintiffs to Intervene. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF703, 1/26/93).

41. Declaration of Claire J. Merced. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 714; 1/26/1993); Motion by plaintiffs-intervenors META. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 704; 1/26/1993); META began in 1983 as a project to address immigrant education issues of Harvard University Center for Law and Education. It eventually spun off and established offices in Somerville, Massachusetts and San Francisco, California and claimed to have been actively involved in most major language rights cases of the period; This was also an opportunity for organized labor to attempt to intervene. The United Educators of San Francisco (UESF) filed a motion to intervene in 1993. Most of the concern centered on the impact school reconstitution would have on its members. UESF’s motion to intervene was ultimately denied. UESF Motion to Intervene. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF726, 3/10/93).

42. Memorandum of points and authorities in support of motion for leave to intervene. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF705, 1/26/93). META represented the petitioners; Irma Herrera was a staff attorney at MALDEF and in charge of MALDEF’s motion to intervene in 1982-1983.

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43. Declaration by Maria Teresa Ponce. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF720, 1/26/93).

44. Declaration by Dahyana Otero. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF708, 1/26/93).

45. Declarations by Dahyana Otero, Laurie Olsen, David Aldape, Richard Maggi, and Susana Salinas. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF708, DF710, DF711, DF713, DF719, 1/26/93).

46. Desegregation and Educational Change in San Francisco, 20. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF673, 6/26/92).

47. Memorandum of points and authorities in support of motion for leave to intervene. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (1/26/93, DF 705).

48. Henry Der was a well-known public education advocate who had served on many SFUSD committees. He was a former member of the SFUSD Affirmative Action Review (1975-1976), SFUSD Educational Redesign Committee (1978-1979), and Citizens Advisory Committee on the Selection of the SFUSD Superintendent (1986-1987).

49. Declaration by Henry Der regarding motion to intervene. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF718, 1/26/93).

50. Declarations by Anthony Ramirez, Assistant Superintendent in the Department of Integration, Ligaya Avenida, Program Director in the Bilingual Education Department, E. Anthony Anderson, High School Operations Department Supervisor, and Susan Wong, Supervisor of the Pupil Services Department, countering the claims made by META declarants. In Response by Local Defendants. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 730, 3/25/93); The Board of Education voted to oppose META’s motion to intervene on March 22, 1993.

51. Declaration by Angie Fa. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF761, 5/7/93).

52. Letter to Tony Ramirez From Leland Yee RE: Comments on Integration Consent Decree Action plan, March 19, 1993. In Declaration by Leland Yee. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF758, 5/7/93).

53. Declaration by Tom Ammiano on behalf of defendant SFUSD regarding META motion to intervene SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 760, 5/7/93).

54. Declaration by Steve Phillips. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF759, 5/7/93).

55. Ibid.

56. School board members Tom Ammiano, Carlota Del Portillo, Angie Fa, Steve Phillips, and Leland Yee voted to support META’s motion to intervene; members Dan Kelly and Jill Wynns voted against. In Order extending time to file appropriate pleadings. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF752, 4/22/93).

57. Declaration of Irma D. Herrera. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF707, 1/26/93).

58. Declaration by Sui-Ming Wan. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF715, 1/26/93).

59. Response by Multicultural Education re opposition memorandum. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 745, 4/1/93). META is referencing Lau v. Nichols, a lawsuit with its own consent decree involving the SFUSD.

60. Memorandum Decision and Order (denying motion to intervene, granting amicus curiae status). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF774, 7/22/93).

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61. United Educators of San Francisco (UESF), the local teachers union representing 6,100

certificated and classified employees, also sought to intervene in SFNAACP v. SFUSD. The union was particularly troubled over the consent decree provisions requiring reconstitution since it would mean vacating all staff positions and potentially involuntarily transferring staff. But similar to META’s intervention, UESF was not interested in challenging the basic contours of the consent decree: “UESF does not seek to upset existing terms of the Consent Decree but only to argue to the court that proposed modifications and future administration.” Memorandum. SFNAACP v. SFUSD, DF727, 3/10/93).

62. Memorandum Decision and Order (denying motion to intervene, granting amicus curiae status). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF774, 7/22/93).

63. The Latino Group consisted of Mujeres Unidas y Activas, Alianza, Padres Unidos, Susana Salinas, Noemi Ortiz, and her two daughters, Nadia and Adriana. The Asian Group consisted of Chinese for Affirmative Action, Sui-Ming Wan, and her two daughters Jacky and Wynne. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF774, 7/22/93).

64. Desegregation and Educational Change in San Francisco, 20-21. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (6/26/1992, DF 673).

65. The neighborhoods most impacted were Chinatown, North Beach, Parkside, Richmond, Sunset, and Western Addition districts. Leonard Greene, “Busing Plan in Peril as Chinese Students Tilt Balance in San Francisco, San Francisco Chronicle, October 2, 1989.

66. Leonard Greene, “Busing Plan in Peril as Chinese Students Tilt Balance in San Francisco, San Francisco Chronicle, October 2, 1989.

67. Ibid.

68. Ibid.; Lulann McGriff had worked on school desegregation issues for the SFNAACP since the mid-1970s. She served as chapter president from 1987 to 1994. Nanette Asimov, “Guardian at the School Gate,” San Francisco Chronicle, November 3, 1996.

69. Leslie Yee to Roland Quan, September 3, 1988. Box 3, Folder 8, Records of the Chinese American Democratic Club, California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives, University of California, Santa Barbara (hereafter CEMA 49).

70. The 1983 settlement placed the 45 percent subgroup cap on all public schools except for fourteen alternative schools that had a cap of 40 percent. The schools were: Wallenberg High School, Lawton Middle School, International Studies, Second Community, San Francisco Community, Clarendon, New Traditions, Douglas Traditional, Argonne Elementary, Rooftop, Lilienthal, Lakeshore, Buena Vista, and John Swett. The 1994 amended settlement placed a 45 percent cap on regular schools and a 40 percent cap on all alternative schools.

71. Diane Curtis, “Top Rated Lowell a Pressure Cooker,” San Francisco Chronicle. June 11, 1986.

72. Lowell High School is the top feeder school to the University of California system in the state. was the recipient of numerous accolades and praise. In 1986, the New York Times named Lowell one of the top 45 schools in the nation. That year the school was also named a winner in the California Department of Education’s first Distinguished Schools Award. See, for example, Julian Guthrie, “50% drop in Blacks, Latinos at Lowell,” San Francisco Examiner, March 16, 1999.

73. San Francisco Chronicle, “Lowell Quota Would be Unfair,” Editorial, August 11, 1988; The San Francisco Examiner was more circumspect, arguing that “as long as the district maintains one

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academically superior high school, Lowell, entrance cannot be colorblind,” but acknowledging that the burden of the new proposal would be unevenly borne across the nine subgroups. San Francisco Examiner, “S.F. schools rethink the ethnic mix,” Editorial, August 11, 1988.

74. AsianWeek, “Yee decries S.F. school plan,” August 19, 1988.

75. CADC 30th Anniversary Program, “CADC History,” March, 1988. Berkeley Ethnic Studies Library; Correspondence with Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009.

76. Correspondence with Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009.

77. Roland Quan to Ramon Cortines regarding Proposed “Refinements” to Desegregation Plan, August 18, 1988. Box 4, Folder 4, CEMA 49.

78. Correspondence with Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009. As Doug Chan recalls, the very first CADC member to recognize the looming crisis with the consent decree was Clifford Lee, a career deputy state attorney general recruited to the organization in 1984 during a Gary Hart for President campaign event. “Cliff was the first guy to perceive the problem, talk up the fact that the consent decree struck at the core interests of the Chinese American community, and that the consent decree was worthy of challenge. Senior CADC members such as Harold [Yee], the late Roland Quan, and Louis [Hop Lee] blessed the idea, and the younger folks ran with the idea.” Correspondence, Doug Chan, August 13, 2009.

79. Leslie Yee to Roland Quan, September 3, 1988. Box 3, Folder 8, CEMA 49.

80. “School Integration Consent Decree” CADC. No date. But probably late 1988 early 1989. Box 10, Folder 3, CEMA 49.

81. Ibid.

82. Leonard Greene, “Busing Plan in Peril as Chinese Students Tilt Balance in S.F.,” San Francisco Chronicle, October 2, 1989. Henry Der was a long-time education advocate whose experience included serving a stint on the district’s Educational Redesign committee in the late 1970s.

83. Voice: CAA Newsletter, “Fairness or Discontent: Lowell High Freshman,” Fall 1993.

84. For example, a student who had 57 points could have had 59 if she received an ‘A’ in 8th grade English rather than a ‘B’.

85. Interview, Steve Phillips, July 23, 2009.

86. Deborah Escobedo and Irma Herrera, META to Attorneys in SFNAACP, November 16, 1992. In Declaration of Deborah Escobedo in support of motion for intervention. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF706, 1/26/93).

87. Declaration by Henry Der. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 718, 1/26/93).

88. Andrew Leonard, “Class Action,” San Francisco Bay Guardian, April 7, 1993.

89. Correspondence, Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009.

90. Interview, Amy Chang, February 10, 2010.

91. Interview, Steve Phillips, July 23, 2009.

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92. Resolution on SFUSD Consent Decree. Fiery Dragon News, CADC, March 1993.

93. Brief of Objections, Chinese American Democratic Club. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF750; 4/22/93); See also CADC and the Consent Decree, Fiery Dragon News, May 1993.

94. Interview, Amy Chang, February 10, 2010; From the perspective of CADC, at least part of the resistance by the board and superintendent to addressing the enrollment cap issue was the considerable amount of state funding that flowed through the consent decree; There were some exceptions, though, Mayor Dianne Feinstein and Supervisor Quentin Kopp expressed their support. Correspondence, Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009.

95. Fiery Dragon News, CADC, April 1993. A small group of CADC members were actively involved throughout the course of the consent decree campaign. Recently elected CADC board member Henry Louie, Lee Cheng, an alumnus of Lowell, and Amy Chang, the chair of the task force and CADC’s public spokesperson on the consent decree.

96. Fiery Dragon News, CADC, April 1993.

97. Fiery Dragon News, CADC, “Lowell H.S.—Admissions Change or Spare Change,” June 1993. Some of the rhetoric was more incendiary. The CADC described the impact of the consent decree as scapegoating innocent children of Chinese descent as “San Francisco’s own form of ‘ethnic cleansing.’” Fiery Dragon News, CADC, June 1993.

98. Andrew Leonard, “Class Action,” San Francisco Bay Guardian, April 7, 1993.

99. Ibid.

100. CADC Press Packet, July, 1994.

101. Samson Wong, President, CADC to CAA, April 19, 1993. Reprinted in Fiery Dragon News, CADC, May 1993.

102. CADC and CAA had been close partners, with shared memberships, interlocking boards of directors, and mutually supported fundraisers. Interview, Victor Seeto, September 2, 2009; Relations were strained but not destroyed. Henry Louie recalls that “while the tension existed [over the consent decree]… there were still a lot of opportunities for the two organizations to work together on issues of common interest.” Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009.

103. Brief of Objections, Chinese American Democratic Club. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 750, 4/22/93)

104. Amy Chang describes the legal campaign as “a David versus Goliath story.” Correspondence, February 12, 2010.

105. Interview, Steve Phillips, July 23, 2009. Peter Cohn had been a member of the NAACP’s National Board of Directors and Western Regional Attorney for NAACP activities in California and eight other Western States. He became the SFNAACP’s primary contact on consent decree implementation and monitoring activities from its establishment. Response by META regarding Opposition Memorandum. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 745, 4/1/93).

106. Nanette Asimov, “Lowell High Fails Desegregation Test,” San Francisco Chronicle, September 9, 1993.

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107. The task force was chaired by Paul Warren, dean of the University of San Francisco School

of Education. “It’s tough,” said Warren to a Chronicle reporter. “Unless public schools find a way to address the issues at the forefront of this discussion—equity and excellence—they’re in deep trouble.” Nanette Asimov, “Lowell High Fails Desegregation Test,” San Francisco Chronicle, September 9, 1993; Fiery Dragon News, CADC, “Lowell High School Admissions Panel Update,” November 1993; Voice, CAA, “Fairness or Discontent: Lowell High Freshman,” Fall 1993; Nanette Asimov, “Clone Lowell High, Education Panel Says,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 22, 1993.

108. Fiery Dragon News, CADC, “Lowell High School Admissions Panel Update,” November 1993.

109. Nanette Asimov, “Clone Lowell High, Education Panel Says,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 22, 1993.

110. Lee Cheng, a law student active in the CADC consent decree task force, felt that “the judiciary and the judicial route was a much more effective and efficient way to go.” Interview, Lee Cheng, August 22, 2009.

111. Amy Chang to Doug Chan (Handwritten note), July 17, 1994. In CADC Press Packet, c1994.

112. Leslie Yee to Roland Quan, September 3, 1988. Box 3, Folder 8, CEMA 49.

113. Correspondence, Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009.

114. Interview, Lee Cheng, August 22, 2009. The Legal Luncheon was held on December 7, 1993 at the Grand Palace Restaurant. Interview, Amy Chang, February 10, 2010; Details on the search for potential lawyers and the legal luncheon culled from: Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009; Interview, David Levine, July 30, 2009; Interview, Anthony Lee, September 30, 2009.

115. Declaration by Amy Chang, Ho v. SFUSD (DF432, 6/3/99)

116. Interview, Daniel Girard, August 24, 2009. Henry Louie recalls that approximately ten firms sent representatives to the legal luncheon. Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009.

117. In early 1994, the Court approved an amendment to the consent decree that included, among other items, extending the 40 percent enrollment cap to every alternative school in the district (previously, only a designated subset of alternative schools were held to the cap), and deleting the section placing more restrictive caps on certain subgroups at certain designated schools (¶14). Amended 1983 Consent Decree. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF804, 3/9/94).

118. The Admission of Chinese Students to San Francisco High Schools, Fiery Dragon News, CADC, April 1994.

119. Interview, Lee Cheng, August 22, 2009.

120. Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009.

121. Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009; Interview, Ron Chun, August 26, 2009. Hannah Nordhaus, “Desegregation Suit Spawns New Bar Foundation,” The Recorder, January 17, 1995. AALF held a fundraising dinner attracting Asian American professionals from the Bay Area. The money raised went toward various miscellaneous expenses including filing charges, printing and reproduction costs, and the like.

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122. Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009.

123. In addition to the SFUSD, the action was filed against the district superintendent Bill Rojas, the school board, the state board of education, California Department of Education, and the State Superintendent of Education. On January 12, 1995, the court added the SFNAACP as a defendant. Minutes. Ho v. SFUSD (DF27, 1/12/95).

124. CADC Press Packet, From the personal records of Douglas Chan, July 1994.

125. 中黑:族裔限額 Sing Tao Daily, May 27, 1994 [Original: 三藩市華裔家長反對設族裔上限的混合教育政策,

本來是有節有理. 學校應打開大門招生,不分種族,按客觀公平的原則取錄.]

126. Nanette Asimov, “S.F. Schools Sued on Enrollment,” San Francisco Chronicle, July 12, 1994.

127. Ibid.

128. Early on, Orrick issued an order relating the SFNAACP case establishing the consent decree (SFNAACP v. SFUSD) to Ho. Order relating case. Ho v. SFUSD (DF8, 8/2/94).

129. Defendants moved to dismiss on the basis res judicata and collateral estoppel. Memorandum Opinion, and Order denying motion to dismiss (DF44; 9/28/95). As I describe below, Orrick’s order came soon after the Supreme Court delivered its opinion in Missouri v. Jenkins, an important school desegregation case. See also, Peter Schmidt, “Chinese-American Parents in S.F. Win Round in Court,” Education Week, October 11, 1995; Venise Wagner, “Court Challenge Advances on S.F. School Racial Caps,” San Francisco Examiner, September 29, 1995; Rex Bossert, “Case Against Schools ‘Cap’ to Go Forward,” Daily Journal, September 29, 1995.

130. Memorandum Decision and Order, March 8, 1996, Ho v. SFUSD (DF66, 3/12/96).

131. Notice of Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF190, 6/6/80)

132. Interview, Stuart Biegel, May 22, 2009.

133. San Francisco Board of Education Policy for Lowell Admissions (#62-13SP1).

134. Nanette Asimov, “Lowell Freshmen Reflect New Entry Rules,” San Francisco Chronicle, August 28, 1996.

135. Motion for Summary Judgment. Ho v. SFUSD (DF68, 07/23/1996); 98 C.D.O.S. 4275 (California Daily Opinion Service); Changes in desegregation and affirmative action jurisprudence that underlie Ho’s claim for summary judgment are detailed below.

136. Opinion Denying Motion for Summary Judgment, Ho v. SFUSD (DF116, 5/5/97).

137. 98 C.D.O.S. 4277; Rojas continued: “However, race or ethnicity is considered as a factor in determining whether the student population of a SFUSD school is within the guidelines set forth in Paragraph 13 of the Consent Decree and sometimes a student is not permitted to enroll if the school is overcrowded or outside the guideline.”

138. Orrick found that “plaintiffs failed to show an absence of a factual dispute relating to the necessity of relief, efficacy of alternative remedies, flexibility and duration of relief, waiver provisions, relationship of numerical goals to the relevant population, and impact on relief on third parties” (98 C.D.O.S. 4275).

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139. Education Week, “Judge Blocks Bid To Ax Quotas in S.F. Schools,” May 21, 1997. As a

young lawyer, Alex Pitcher provided assistance to Thurgood Marshall in cases that set the stage for Brown. Gregory Lewis, “Cancer Claims Civil Rights Warrior at 73,” San Francisco Examiner, January 7, 2000.

140. Milliken v. Bradley, 418 U.S. 717 (1974). Milliken placed restrictions on the busing allowed under Swann by ruling that in the absence of constitutional violations, suburban districts were not required to be part of central city integration plans.

141. Ibid., 745: “Without an interdistrict violation and interdistrict effect, there is no constitutional wrong calling for an interdistrict remedy.”

142. Ibid., 740.

143. Board of Education of the Oklahoma City Public Schools v. Dowell, 498 U.S. 237 (1991); Freeman v. Pitts, 503 U.S. 467 (1992).

144. The three-part test is referred to as the “Dowell/Freeman” test and was used in 2005 to determine whether to extend the consent decree to June 2007 or to allow it to expire. Freeman, 503 U.S. at 491.

145. Dowell, 498 U.S. at 250.

146. Missouri v. Jenkins, 515 U.S. 70 (1995).

147. The dissenting Justices were Souter, Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer.

148. By 1995, the district had been reimbursed over $300 million in desegregation expenses by the State of California. Annual Report of the Local Defendants. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF776, 7/30/93); Notice by Defendants. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF 874, 7/31/98).

149. San Francisco Chronicle, “The Supreme Court Lurches Backwards,” Editorial, July 7, 1995.

150. Bakke v. Regents of University of California, 18 Cal.3d 34 (1976), 62.

151. Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265 (1978), 320.

152. Bakke v. Regents of University of California, 18 Cal.3d 34 (1976), 62.

153. Warren Weaver, Jr., “Justice Dept. Brief 1 of 58 in Bakke Case,” New York Times, September 20, 1977.

154. Ibid..

155. Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265 (1978).

156. Bakke, 438 U.S. at 320. In affirming that the special admissions program was unlawful, Justice Powell was joined by Chief Justice Burger and Justices Stewart, Rehnquist, and Stevens. In allowing that a properly devised admissions program might involve the consideration of race, Powell was joined by Justices Brennan, White, Marshal, and Blackmun.

157. The New York Times, “Who Won?” Editorial, June 29, 1978.

158. City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co., 488 U.S. 469 (1989) and Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200 (1995), 494.

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159. Adarand, 515 U.S. at 229.

160. Ibid., 235.

161. Ibid., 237; Croson, 488 U.S. at 507.

162. For a similar argument, see Caitlin Liu, “Beyond Black and White: Chinese Americans Challenge San Francisco's Desegregation Plan,” Asian Law Journal 5 (1998): 341-352.

163. Executive Order to End Preferential Treatment and to Promote Individual Opportunity Based on Merit (#W-124-95, June 1, 1995).

164. Yumi Wilson and Kenneth Garcia, “Wilson Signs Away Affirmative Action,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 2, 1995.

165. Prohibition Against Discrimination or Preferential Treatment by State and Other Public Entities. Initiative Constitutional Amendment (Proposition 209). Text of Proposed Law. California Secretary of State.

166. The U.C. Regents approved the ban on preferential treatment in admissions (Special Policy 1) and contracting and employment (Special Policy 2) in July 1995. The policies were repealed in 2001, however, restrictions instituted through Proposition 209 remain in place.

167. Carol Ness and Annie Nakao, “Voters back ban on affirmative action by 55-45 percent,” San Francisco Chronicle, November 6, 1996.

168. Remarks on Affirmative Action at the National Archives and Records Administration. Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States—William J. Clinton, 1995. Book II , July 1 to December 31, 1995 (Government Printing Office, 1995), 1106-1113. See also, New York Times, “Clinton Plans a Review of Affirmative Action Programs,” February 24, 1995.

169. An additional flash point in the affirmative action debate was Texas. In a 1996 ruling that attracted widespread attention, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals determined that the University of Texas Law School erred in using race as a factor in admissions (Hopwood v. Texas, 78 F. 3d 932). The decision would be abrogated by the Supreme Court in 2003 (Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306)

170. “California and Affirmative Action.” Hearing before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate. April 30, 1996.

171. Ibid., 47.

172. Executive Order 13050 of June 13, 1997. President’s Advisory Board on Race. Federal Register, Vol. 62 No. 116.

173. “State-Sanctioned Discrimination in America.” Hearing before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate. June 16, 1997; The hearing is archived at http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/86872-1.

174. Ibid., 38.

175. Charlene F. Wong to Jennie A. Horn, Supervisor, Educational Placement Center, March 25, 1994. Attachment to Revised Expert Witness Statement of Henry Der. Ho v. SFUSD (DF331, 2/3/99). Patrick Wong was eventually allowed to enroll into Lincoln High School, his fourth choice.

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176. “State-Sanctioned Discrimination in America.” Hearing before the Committee on the

Judiciary, United States Senate. June 16, 1997, 39.

177. See, for example, statements by Senators Hatch (November 4, 1997) and Sessions (November 9, 1997) on the floor of the U.S. Senate in opposition to the nomination of Bill Lann Lee to be assistant attorney general for civil rights and remarks by Elaine Chao on the President’s Initiative on Race (April 29, 1998; July 9, 1998).

178. Interview with Daniel Girard, August 24, 2009. Loen’s testimony was discussed on the June 16, 1997 PBS broadcast of The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.

179. Full Board, Public Session Minutes, California State Board of Education, September 12, 1997. In Declaration by Janet Sommer. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF869, 10/21/97).

180. Quoted in Alethea Yip, “New Support in School Desegregation Case,” AsianWeek, September 5, 1997.

181. Full Board, Public Session Minutes, California State Board of Education, September 12, 1997. In Declaration by Janet Sommer. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF869, 10/21/97). The State Board of Education was represented by John Yoo, a professor of law at University of California, Berkeley. Eventually, Patrick Manshardt of the Individual Rights Foundation, served as counsel.

182. The assertion was made through the spokesperson for the State Superintendent, Doug Stone. Quoted in Alethea Yip, “New Support in School Desegregation Case.” AsianWeek, September 5, 1997. See also, John Yoo and Eric George, “When Desegregation Turns Into Discrimination,” Wall Street Journal, May 26, 1998.

183. Nanette Asimov, “Wilson Sides with S.F. Chinese Americans on Schools Lawsuit to End Court-Supervised Desegregation,” San Francisco Chronicle, August 21, 1997.

184. Alethea Yip, “New Support in School Desegregation Case.” AsianWeek, September 5, 1997.

185. CADC supported efforts by The Association of Chinese Teachers (TACT) to increase their representation. Correspondence with Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009; See also, Ramon Cortines, Superintendent of Schools, SFUSD to Roland Quan, President, CADC, June 28, 1988. Box 3, Folder 8, CEMA 49.

186. Alethea Yip, “New Support in School Desegregation Case.” AsianWeek, September 5, 1997.

187. Correspondence with Louis Hop Lee, October 27, 2009

188. CADC Press Packet, July, 1994.

189. Interview with Doug Chan, August 26, 2009.

190. Interview with Henry Der, September 2, 2009.

191. The intricacies of the legal proceedings during this period of the consent decree are clearly detailed in co-counsel for plaintiff David Levine’s “The Chinese American Challenge to Court-Mandated Quotas in San Francisco's Public Schools: Notes from a (partisan) participant-observer,” Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal 16 (2000): 39-145. The paper and my interview with Professor Levine were invaluable to me in writing the following sections.

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192. Ho by Ho v. San Francisco Unified School Dist., 147 F. 3d 854 (1998); No findings of fact

had been supplied by the district court. The panel majority noted that the normal way of adjudication is “first the facts, then the decision of the district court, then the appeal. In a case where facts are critical, we cannot change this order of business.” Plaintiffs had also sought a writ of mandamus directing the Court not to proceed with the trial (scheduled for September 1998), which was also denied. Ibid. at 861.

193. Ho by Ho, 147 F. 3d 8 at 865; This section is aided by interviews with Stuart Biegel, May 22, 2009; David Levine, July 30, 2009; and Daniel Girard, August 24, 2009.

194. Ho by Ho, 147 F. 3d at 863.

195. Ibid., 865.

196. Interviews, David Levine, July 30, 2009; Stuart Biegel, May 22, 2009; Daniel Girard, August 24, 2009; See also Levine, “Chinese American Challenge”; The dissenting judge agreed with much of the majority opinion. However, he argued that the conclusory statements by the district meant that “neither the trial judge nor we had before us any genuinely contested facts sufficient either to create a genuine issue, or to deprive an appellate court of jurisdiction. Ho by Ho, 147 F. 3d at 866.

197. Ho by Ho, 147 F. 3d at 865.

198. Nanette Asimov, “S.F. Schools Plan Drastic Budget Cut,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 22, 1998. At the time, SFUSD enrolled approximately 64,000 students and had about a $500 million budget.

199. At the time the consent decree was approved, California’s Education Code contained a provision allowing for the full reimbursement by the state for all court-ordered desegregation costs incurred by school districts. Subsequently, in 1985, the Education Code was amended to require a reimbursement of 80% of expenditures in excess of the amount expended for the 1984-1985 year, adjusted for districtwide enrollment growth and cost of living (Statutes of 1985, Chapter 180, §42247). Beginning with the 1994-1995 term, SFUSD (along with other districts) fell into a dispute with the state when it failed to reimburse districts for allowable expenses over the course of a number of years. For example, for the 1994-1995 term, the State Controller approved $30,306,296, but SFUSD only received $28,163,550. For the 1995-1996 term, the Controller approved $38,736,742, but SFUSD only received $28,164,000. In 1998, the legislature appropriated funds to cover the shortfall but this line item was vetoed by Governor Wilson; The issue came to a head in 1999, when Superintendent Rojas publicly called for monies past due to be provided: “It's appropriate for me to complain this year, because I didn't get the money this year or the year before that or the year before that,” complained Rojas. “We have not received [desegregation] funds for '94, '95 or '96.” Eric Brazil and Robert Salladay, “Cash for S.F. Schools Comes with Lecture,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 19,1999; For the 1996-1997 school term, SFUSD claimed $35,952,302 in desegregation expenses; for 1997-1998, SFUSD claimed $36,950,429 in desegregation expenses; for 1998-99, SFUSD claimed $37,624,000 in desegregation expenses. See Defendants’ 1992-1993 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF776, 7/30/93); Defendants’ 1997-98 Annual Report (Volume II). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF874, 7/31/98); Defendants’ 1998-1999 Annual Report. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1035, 8/4/99); Consent Decree Monitor’s Annual Report, Paragraph 44 Independent Review, 1996-1997 (DF865, 9/29/97); and, Consent Decree Monitor’s Annual Report, Paragraph 44 Independent Review, 1998-1999 (DF1033, 7/29/99).

200. In March, Orrick scheduled a trial for September 22, 1998. Order for Civil Pretrial Conference. Ho v. SFUSD (DF146, 3/2/98); During an August status conference, Orrick vacated the September trial date and scheduled a trial for February 8, 1999. Minutes, Ho v. SFUSD. (DF208, 8/28/98). See Levine, “Chinese American Challenge” for a detailed chronicle of activities that took place following the appeals court remand. The parties filed several motions regarding “discovery, expert witnesses, and the scope of trial” (75).

201. Ho, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 1025.

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202. Joseph Remcho and Robin Johansen, senior partners at Remcho, Johansen & Purcell were

retained.

203. Levine, “Chinese American Challenge,” 96.

204. Ibid., 96-97.

205. The special master appointed by Orrick was Thomas Klitgaard, a long-time San Francisco attorney with arbitration experience.

206. Proposed Modifications to the Consent Decree, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (Memorandum, DF876, 10/15/98).

207. “Regular schools: student populations shall reflect the District’s student geographical and socio-economic distributions. SFUSD will divide the city into geographic zones, reserve at least 25% of seats at regular schools for neighborhood students, and allow an additional 10% of the seats for siblings. If a regular school becomes oversubscribed, the District will use a lottery system to determine admission. Alternative schools: attendance to these schools will be based on pass/fail qualifying criteria and a lottery and shall reflect plus or minus 10% of the student geographical distribution, again based on reasonable geographic zones. This will assure that alternative schools will be accessible to the entire SFUSD population” Memorandum by State Defendant. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF876, 10/15/98).

208. Proposed Modifications to the Consent Decree, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (Memorandum, DF876, 10/15/98).

209. Levine, “Chinese American Challenge,” 97.

210. “The parties have not submitted a single declaration or any other piece of evidence to support their stipulation to modify the Decree.” Memorandum Decision and Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF904, 12/2/98).

211. Memorandum Decision and Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF904, 12/2/98).

212. Opinion and Order, Ho v. SFUSD, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 1029, footnote 2.

213. Ibid.

214. Order, Ho v. SFUSD, (DF271, 11/20/98). For a discussion, see Levine, “Chinese American Challenge,” 75.

215. Levine, “Chinese American Challenge,” 76.

216. The description of the final push toward settlement were taken from Levine, “Chinese American Challenge,” 99-100.

217. “It would have been a very divisive trial,” remarked Stuart Biegel, who had heard that one side of the courtroom was nearly all African American and the other side was nearly all Chinese American. Interview, Stuart Biegel, May 22, 2009; Judge Orrick commended the parties for saving weeks of trial that would have been “emotional.” Reporter’s Transcript, February 17, 1999. Ho v. SFUSD (DF403, 4/16/99); The Court: “The years of litigation that were certain to result from a trial in the Ho action, regardless of the outcome, would have been very expensive. A great deal of that expense would have been borne by the taxpayers. In addition, the trial and subsequent litigation likely would have been extremely divisive in the community. The case had attracted considerable attention from the press in the weeks before trial. On the day trial was to begin, the courtroom was filled with press and concerned citizens. The Court has no doubt

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that a settlement of this action, if possible, would have been preferable to a lengthy, racially divisive trial.” Opinion & Order, Ho v. SFUSD. 59 F. Supp. 2d 1021 at 25.

218. Reporter’s Transcript, February 17, 1999. Ho v. SFUSD (DF403, 4/16/99).

219. SFNAACP, 59 F.Supp.2d 1025-1027.

220. “… except as related to the language needs of the student or otherwise to assure compliance with controlling federal or state law.” SFNAACP, 59 F.Supp.2d 1025-1027, ¶C

221. For the Ho plaintiffs, this was an important victory. “The days of racial bean-counting are over,” remarked Amy Chang. Joan Walsh, “A new racial era for San Francisco schools,” Salon, February 18, 1999.

222. “The parties acknowledge that SFUSD officials have the duty and authority to determine lawful criteria for admission to all schools in the SFUSD.” Opinion and Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD 59 F.Supp.2d at 1025-1027.

223. Julian Guthrie and Eric Brazil, “Judge OKs settlement to end consent decree,” San Francisco Examiner, April 21, 1999. Among the protesters were U.C. Berkeley students who fought to preserve higher education affirmative action; BAMN Outreach Flier c1999.

224. Julian Guthrie and Eric Brazil, “Judge OKs Settlement to End Consent Decree,” San Francisco Examiner, April 21, 1999.

225. Request by Rahel Tekeste. Ho v. SFUSD (DF387, 4/7/99).

226. Interview, Shanta Driver, September 12, 2009. Driver is a BAMN founder and national coordinator.

227. To build support leading up to the fairness hearing, BAMN’s organizing activities included conducting in-school presentations, working with teachers, and circulating petitions calling for the preservation of school integration. Interview, Ronald Cruz, January 13, 2010; Interview, Miranda Massie, August 31, 2009.

228. Interview, Shanta Driver, September 12, 2009.

229. BAMN Outreach Flier c1999.

230. See, for example, Nanette Asimov, “S.F. Schools Leave Hole in Diversity Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, October 21, 1999; Venise Wagner, “Students Oppose Lowell Suit Deal,” San Francisco Examiner, December 15, 1999.

231. Interview, Ronald Cruz, February 13, 2010.

232. Request to be heard in opposition, Shanta Driver. Ho v. SFUSD (DF377, 4/7/99).

233. Letter to Judge Orrick from Diane Chin on behalf of Chinese for Affirmative Action, Chinese Progressive Association, Chinatown Youth Center, and two community leaders, Gordon Chin and Reverend Harry Chuck. Ho v. SFUSD (DF395, 4/7/99).

234. Diane Chin, “End of Decree Hurts Chinese American Children,” Opinion, San Francisco Chronicle, March 17, 1999.

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235. Progress Made, Challenges Remaining in San Francisco School Desegregation. Report of the

Consent Decree Advisory Committee to the Federal District Court, San Francisco, California. Ho v. SFUSD (DF292, 1/19/99); The Consent Decree Advisory Committee included Laureen Chew, Robert L. Green, Hoover Liddell, Gary Orfield, J. David Ramirez, and Gwen Stephens.

236. “From the beginning the basic strategy of the decree was to accomplish desegregation and make educational opportunity more equal, while providing more good educational choices for all students. In the 1990s the effort has been to extend its most effective remedies from the Bayview-Hunter’s Point community to the entire city and to reach groups not previously sharing fully in the remedy.” Progress Made, Challenges Remaining in San Francisco School Desegregation. Report of the Consent Decree Advisory Committee to the Federal District Court, San Francisco, California. Ho v. SFUSD (DF292, 1/19/99).

237. Gary Orfield, “Report on the Proposed Settlement,” April 15, 1999. In Order. Ho v. SFUSD (DF404, 4/16/99).

238. Opinion and Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD 59 F.Supp. 2d 1021 (1999).

¶ C. The parties acknowledge that SFUSD officials have the duty and authority to determine lawful criteria for admission to all schools in the SFUSD. The parties further acknowledge that in setting those criteria, state and federal law provide that district officials may consider many factors, including the desire to promote residential, geographic, economic, racial and ethnic diversity in all SFUSD schools. However, race or ethnicity may not be the primary or predominant consideration in determining such admission criteria. Further, the SFUSD will not assign or admit any student to a particular school, class or program on the basis of the race or ethnicity of that student, except as related to the language needs of the student or otherwise to assure compliance with controlling federal or state law.

239. David Ely was an expert in demographic analysis and had been a consultant and retained expert in several cases regarding redistricting, reapportionment and the redrawing of school attendance zones. Amendment to Summary of Witness Testimony for Trial by Defendant Delaine Eastin, State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Ho v. SFUSD. (DF303, 1/25/99). Ely’s analysis was based on 1990 Census data, the Court Monitor cautioned, and thus an assignment system based on his computer modeling would need to be carefully monitored. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 29, 1999. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1033, 7/29/99).

240. In the proposed settlement, the parties agreed to a preliminary injunction that would immediately remove the racial and ethnic classifications. See 59 F.Supp.2d at 1026, ¶ H. Preferences were given to siblings of current enrollees, children living in certain ZIP codes, and to children living near a school.

241. Levine, “Chinese American Challenge,” 109.

242. See, for example, Local Defendants’ 1984-85 annual report. (DF395, 8/1/85)

243. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. at54-55.

244. Although Lowell was an alternative school, its process for admission was separate from the OER application. Students wishing to attend School of the Arts completed an OER form and a special application, and went through an audition process.

245. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, September 29, 1997.

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246. Some students could not attend the school designated by their home address because doing

so would cause the school to violate its subgroup enrollment cap or because the school had reached its enrollment limit. If a seat subsequently became available at the designated school, preference would be given to a bumped student.

247. For example, during the 1996-1997 school year, the priority went to students with permanent addresses with 94110, 94124, and 94134 zip codes. The enrollment priority for students living in 94110, which spanned the Mission District and Bernal Heights was changed the following year. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 1998. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF875; 7/31/98); “Our community [in Bernal Heights] had been pretty blue-collar for a long time, but I think it had definitely already started to undergo some gentrification… I think it was specifically because of Bernal Heights, they changed the rule… at least for the 94110 one, you had to also show low-income to get that priority,” recalls Deena Zacharin, Director of the SFUSD Office of School/Family Partnership and co-founder of Parents for Public Schools—San Francisco. “Somebody kind of got aware of the fact that not the whole 94110 was necessarily low-income.” Interview, Deena Zacharin, September 30, 2009; Interview, K.C. Jones, August 11, 2009.

248. For the 1991-1992 term, of the 11,363 OERs processed by the SFUSD, the district granted 6,842. That year, 25,371 of the 63,806 SFUSD students were on an Optional Attendance Permit. Local Defendants’ 1991-92 Annual Report, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF679, 7/31/92).

249. Declaration by David Aldape, Alianza, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF711, 1/26/93); See also Declaration by Richard Maggi, Latin American Teachers Association, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF713, 1/26/93) and Declaration by Susana Salinas, Bilingual Advisory Committee, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF719, 1/26/93).

250. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, 11, July 29, 1999. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1033, 7/29/99).

251. Interview, Mark Sanchez, June 15, 2009. The issue elicited a wide range of responses, with some informants considering it to be more widespread than others. See, for example, interviews with Matt Kelemen, August 11, 2009; Dan Kelly, September 8, 2009; Hydra Mendoza, October 20, 2009; Jill Wynns, June 16, 2009; Caroline Grannan, June 30, 2009; Dan Kelly, September 8, 2009; See also Diana Walsh, “Big Scramble to Get Kids into Choice Schools,” San Francisco Examiner, December 23, 1990 and Nanette Asimov, “Racial Fakery Gets Kids into Better S.F. Schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 9, 1990.

252. Declaration of Donald I. Barfield, Ho v. SFUSD (DF538, 4/11/01).

253. On Rojas’s support of consent decree, see Fraga and others, “Desegregation and School Board Politics: The Limits of Court-Imposed Policy Change,” in Beseiged. School Boards and the Future of Education Politics, ed. William G. Howell, (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2005), 102-128; Rojas was noted for his strong support of several elements of the consent decree, including reconstitution, and for presiding over a period when student test scores increased; See also Nanette Asimov, “Rojas' Record Can't Be Denied,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 21, 1999.

254. Declaration of Donald I. Barfield, Attachment C-5, C-7. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1228, 4/11/01).

255. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 29, 1999, 54. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1033, 7/29/99). Rojas was interviewed by the Court Monitor on June 14, 1999.

256. Eric Brazil and Robert Salladay, “Lawmakers Scold Rojas Over School Cuts,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 18, 1999. Concerns over financial mismanagement plagued the

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Superintendent throughout his term. Allegations emerged soon after the 1999 bond issuance of $60 million (part of a $90 million school bond approved on June 3, 1997 through Proposition A). Subsequently, a city audit concluded that the SFUSD needed a better system to manage its financial reporting. The San Francisco Unified School District Cannot Accurately Account for the Revenues and Expenditures of its $90 Million 1997 Bond Issue. Office of the Controller, City Services Auditor, City and County of San Francisco. January 24, 2005.

257. Julian Guthrie, “Improvement may be Smoke and Mirrors,” San Francisco Examiner, April 12, 1999.

258. Julian Guthrie, “School Shocker: Rojas Quitting,” San Francisco Chronicle, April 23, 1999.

259. Nanette Asimov, “Rojas' Record Can't be Denied,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 21, 1999.

260. Deputy Superintendent Linda Davis served as interim superintendent for the 1999-2000 school year, becoming the first woman and the first African American to lead San Francisco’s schools. Arlene Ackerman became the first woman and the first African American to permanently hold the superintendency.

261. Amendment to Summary of Witness Testimony for Trial by Defendant Delaine Eastin, State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Ho v. SFUSD (DF303, 1/25/99).

262. Levine, “Chinese American Challenge”; Presumably, Ho anticipated a system similar to Horseshoe but with race-neutral assignments.

263. Proposed New Student Assignment Plan. In Declaration by D. Barfield. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1070, 11/23/99); Donald Barfield, Deputy Director for Institutional Development at WestEd, served as a consultant to the SFUSD in the development of the PNSAP.

264. Ibid.

265. Poverty level was to be determined by participation in the Free/Reduced Lunch Program, CalWORKs, or public housing. Academic achievement was to be determined through standardized test scores. Following the 1999 settlement, the district began tracking additional subgroups. For the 2000-2001 application track, the district had the following subgroups: African American, American Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Hispanic/Latino, Japanese, Korean, White, Arabic, Samoan, Southeast Asian, Middle Easterner, and Other Non-White. As agreed upon in the settlement, applicants could also choose a “decline to state” category. Order Denying Plaintiffs’ Motion. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1117, 1/14/00).

266. Proposed New Student Assignment Plan, 7-8. In declaration by D. Barfield. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1070, 11/23/99).

267. Examples of special programs include Special Education, Gifted and Talented Education, and language programs.

268. Proposed New Student Assignment Plan. In declaration by D. Barfield. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1070, 11/23/99).

269. Policy for Lowell Admissions (San Francisco Board of Education #62-13SP1).

270. In what would become an ongoing problem, some parents and guardians did not participate in the choice process. Common explanations revolved around insufficient culturally and linguistically competent outreach on the part of the district. Students who did not make any choice requests were

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“assigned by default.” This population of students, as one might imagine, tended to be among the most educationally disadvantaged in the district.

271. Nanette Asimov, “How SF's New School Choice Process Will Work,” San Francisco Chronicle, November 18, 1999.

272. Proposed New Student Assignment Plan, 6. In declaration by D. Barfield. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1070, 11/23/99).

273. Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Opposition by Plaintiff. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1092, 12/10/99); Levine, “Chinese American Challenge,” 112.

274. SFNAACP, 59 F.Supp.2d at 1025.

275. Interview, David Levine, July 30, 2009.

276. Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1089, 12/17/99).

277. Reporter’s Transcript, December 17, 1999 Hearing. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1159, 4/11/00).

278. Nanette Asimov, “S.F. District OKs Race-Neutral School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 7, 2000.

279. Michael Harris, SFNAACP attorney. In Nanette Asimov, “S.F. District OKs Race-Neutral School Plan,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 7, 2000.

280. 576 F.Supp. 53, ¶12.

281. Ibid., 58, ¶39.

282. See, for example, Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, 1998. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF875, 7/31/98).

283. The plan “seeks to achieve two intertwined and overriding objectives…: first, to eliminate existing segregation (and vestiges of past segregation) in SFUSD’s schools, programs, and classrooms, and second, to improve the academic achievement of all students, but particularly those students whose performance has lagged behind others in SFUSD—African American and Latino students, and students who are English language Learners (“ELL”) of many different ethnicities”. Excellence for All: A Five-Year Comprehensive Plan to Achieve Educational Equity in the San Francisco Unified School District, Revision of January 24, 2002, 1.

284. The Sun-Reporter, “SFUSD Reaches Out to the Community,” March 15, 2001.

285. Interview, David Campos, July 29, 2009; Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2003. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1340, 7/31/03).

286. Annual Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2002, p. 110 (fn 80).

287. Julian Guthrie, “New S.F. Plan Uses Race to Assign Students,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 2, 2001.

288. Katie Savchuk, “Plan may Save Desegregation Funds,” The Lowell, April 6, 2001.

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289. Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1235, 4/20/01).

290. Amended Stipulation and [Proposed] Order Re Modification and Termination of Consent Decree, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1244, 7/11/01); Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1245, 7/11/01).

291. Memorandum Opinion and Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1272, 10/24/01).

292. The stipulation continued: “As the SFUSD shall have, by December 31, 2005, taken all practicable actions to achieve unitary status, including eliminating any vestiges of past de jure racial or ethnic discrimination to the extent practicable and complying with the Consent Decree substantially and in good faith for a reasonable period, the SFUSD and the State shall oppose any attempt to extend, by motion or otherwise, the Consent Decree beyond December 31, 2005.”

293. Attachment A, Amended Stipulation Amended Stipulation and [Proposed] Order Re Modification and Termination of Consent Decree, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1244, 7/11/01); Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1245, 7/11/01).

294. Amending ¶13(j) of the consent decree. Amended Stipulation and [Proposed] Order Re Modification and Termination of Consent Decree, 4, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1244, 7/11/01); Order, SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1245, 7/11/01).

295. Excellence for All: A Five-Year Comprehensive Plan to Achieve Educational Equity in the San Francisco Unified School District, Revision of January 24, 2002.

296. Order by Executive Committee Case Reassigned to William H. Alsup. Ho v. SFUSD (DF581, 1/11/02).

297. Excellence for All: A Five-Year Comprehensive Plan to Achieve Educational Equity in the San Francisco Unified School District, Revision of January 24, 2002, 97.

298. Each factor was a binary variable based on the criteria. Since only students changing schools were assigned under this method (thus, primarily the entry grades of kindergarten, sixth grade and ninth grade) it was a gradual process.

299. “History of the Student Assignment Method,” SFUSD.

300. Enrollment Guide, 2003-2004 Enrollment Period. San Francisco Unified School District.

301. Annual Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2002. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1306, 7/31/02).

302. Excellence for All: A Five-Year Comprehensive Plan to Achieve Educational Equity in the San Francisco Unified School District, Revision of January 24, 2002, Attachment M.

303. GPA: English, math, social studies, and science grades for seventh and eighth grade. SAT-9/STAR: reading comprehension and math scores. Maximum score for the first two years would be 73 points, after which the maximum was 89 points.

304. Annual Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2003. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1340, 7/31/03).

305. Although early versions of the Diversity Index proposed reserving seats in schools throughout the district in order to evenly distribute students who did not participate in the choice process, there was no such provision in the implemented version; “It wouldn’t be practical,” mused former

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Supervisor Mark Sanchez. “If you hold… positions open… you’re going to have a riot, I mean there will be a riot.” Interview, Mark Sanchez, June 15, 2009; Hydra Mendoza, school board commissioner and former executive director of Parents for Public Schools, recalls that in the early 2000s, the number of students that didn’t apply reached into the thousands, primarily from the low-income neighborhoods of Bayview-Hunters Point and Visitacion Valley. Interview, Hydra Mendoza, October 20, 2009; Hoover Liddell, a longtime cabinet-level district employee stated: “For poor kids, I’ve never seen complete choice. We have, for example, Gloria R. Davis, which is out in Hunters Point… and when they closed the school…[parents] could get first choice of any school… Only about seven parents opted to choose a school out of one hundred and forty.” Interview, Hoover Liddell, October 24, 2009.

306. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2003 (DF1340, 7/31/03); Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, August 1, 2005 (DF1439, 8/1/05). The most segregated schools were also among the most underperforming schools in the district.

307. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2003 (DF1340, 7/31/03);

308. Sandra Halladey, “Choosing a School in the New San Francisco Order,” Opinion, San Francisco Chronicle, November 23, 1999.

309. Sandra Halladey, “Choosing a School in the New San Francisco Order,” Opinion, San Francisco Chronicle, November 23, 1999.

310. Letter to the Editor, Sandra Halladey and Deena Zacharin, San Francisco Chronicle, November 13, 1999.

311. Sandra Halladey, “S.F. Schools are Better than Reports—Go See,” Opinion, San Francisco Chronicle, March 26, 1999. Deena Zacharin recalls having a less than positive notion of public schools as her daughter was reaching school age. But then: “ I went to the school, and I remember, like the first visit, just being blown away and thinking, ‘Oh, my God, this would be a great place for my daughter!’ It was really diverse, and the kids were really interactive with the teacher, and their little hands were up answering. Nobody was throwing spitballs or whatever that I thought was going to happen, and no one was running up and down the hallway” (Interview, Deena Zacharin, September 30, 2009).

312. Though part of a national organization, PPS-San Francisco enjoys relative autonomy. “We’re very different, we’re incredibly independent. We’re independently funded, and we really serve the needs of our communities, so we have differences,” stated Ellie Rossiter, Director of PPS-SF. Interview, Ellie Rossiter, July 28, 2009.

313. Interview, Sandra Halladey, August 26, 2009.

314. Diane Curtis, “Parents Rough it to Get Kids into Alternative Schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 14, 1985; San Francisco Chronicle, “Lining Up for Class,” Editorial, January 15, 1985; Interview, Victor Seeto, September, 2, 2009; Interview, Deena Zacharin, September 30, 2009; Correspondence, Amy Chang, February 12, 2010.

315. Diana Walsh, “Big Scramble to Get Kids into Choice Schools,” San Francisco Examiner, December 23,1990.

316. Interview, Sandra Halladey, August 26, 2009.

317. Interview, Hydra Mendoza, October 20, 2009.

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318. Interview, Dana Woldow, August 5, 2005; Interview, Caroline Grannan, June 30, 2009;

Interview, Deena Zacharin, September 30, 2009; Interview, Sandra Halladey, August 26, 2009. See also Nanette Asimov, “Frustration about Schools is on the Rise,” San Francisco Chronicle, September 16, 1991.

319. Interview, Sandra Halladey, August 26, 2009.

320. Interview, Deena Zacharin, September 30, 2009.

321. Interview, Hydra Mendoza, October 20, 2009.

322. Interview, Sandra Halladey, August 26, 2009.

323. Ibid.

324. A common refrain among advocates was: “How can we pit diversity against quality? Why can’t we have high achieving schools for all kids?”

325. Henry Der. “Resegregation and Achievement Gap: Challenges in San Francisco School Desegregation,” Berkeley La Raza Journal, 15 no. 1 (2004): 308-316, 315.

326. Interview, Ellie Rossiter, July 28, 2009.

327. Heather Knight, “S.F. Parents Rekindle Desegregation Debate,” San Francisco Chronicle, October 7, 2003.

328. “The Assignment Method set forth… was developed and adopted by the SFUSD, and the decision to use that particular Assignment Method was not taken at the request of any party or imposed by the Court.” Stipulation and [Proposed] Order Re Modification and Termination of Consent Decree. SFNAACP v. SFUSD. (DF1244, 7/11/01).

329. Although the consent decree was terminated in 2005, the Diversity Index remained the district’s student assignment system.

330. Memorandum and Order, Ho v. SFUSD (DF573, 10/24/01).

331. Susan Shors letter to the Court, September 4, 2001. In Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1251, 9/7/01).

332. Interview, Daniel Girard, August 24, 2009. See also Interview, David Levine, July 30, 2009.

333. The Supreme Court, in Hunt v. Cromartie, 526 U.S. 547, determined that challenging a facially race neutral plan requires showing that race was the predominant motivation in choosing the race neutral factors. Orrick wrote: “There is no evidence before the Court from which the Court can conclude that the District’s race neutral diversity index is an unconstitutional proxy for race.” Memorandum and Order, Ho v. SFUSD (DF573, 10/24/01).

334. David Levine was identified as co-counsel and assisted Girard in matters relating to particular areas of expertise. Anthony Lee and Gordon Fauth rounded out the legal team. To be sure, ties with CADC and AALF remained throughout the years. “We certainly had our input,” recalls AALF and CADC board member Henry Louie. “They never did anything without saying: This is what we think will work for us. And, you know, invariably, we [would] defer to them.” Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009.

335. Interview, Henry Louie, September 2, 2009.

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336. See Interview, Ron Chun, August 26, 2009; Henry Louie letter to the Court, September 1,

2001. In Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1251, 9/7/01).

337. Cheng continues: “In fact, the legal issues that could have been resolved in Ho were not really resolved at all until Seattle and Jefferson County two years ago [i.e., school desegregation case Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1, 551 U.S. 701 (2007)]. And, candidly, I think if we hadn’t settled the case in 2000, we could have avoided Grutter and Gratz [i.e., affirmative action cases Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306 (2003) and Gratz v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 244 (2003)].” Interview, Lee Cheng, August 22, 2009.

338. Victor Seeto letter to the Court, September 5, 2001. In Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1251, 9/7/01).

339. Henry Louie letter to the Court, September 1, 2001. In Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1251, 9/7/01).

340. Elsewhere, Gray identifies herself as a member of the Black Leadership Forum. Venise Wagner, “Blacks Losing Clout in S.F.,” San Francisco Chronicle, October 29, 2000.

341. Letter to the Court from Naomi Gray. In Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1251, 9/7/01).

342. SFNAACP, 576 F. Supp. 54-561983, ¶17-31.

343. Statement to the Health, Family and Environment Committee, Board of Supervisors, San Francisco, March 12, 1998. In Order. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1251, 9/7/01). Earlier that year, Gray asked: “What has busing accomplished and what has the consent decree accomplished? Busing has been almost one way - our kids heading out (of the Bayview). And look at our kids' test scores. You have to wonder when there's so much money going into something and still such poor outcome ” Julian Guthrie, “S.F. School Race-Bias Case Trial Starts Soon,” San Francisco Examiner, February 14, 1999.

344. Approximately 60 percent of kindergarten, 69 percent of middle school, and 45 percent of high school students who requested a particular neighborhood school had been accommodated. Julian Guthrie, “Enrollment Wraps Up,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 3, 2002.

345. Julian Guthrie, “Enrollment Wraps Up,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 3, 2002.

346. The school attendance boundaries were based on pre-Horseshoe lines. On top of this, in order to facilitate compliance with the enrollment caps, a system of satellite zones was created.

347. Enrollment Guide, 2003-2004, San Francisco Unified School District, 9.

348. “Under the new assignment process, after placement of students with program needs and siblings of existing students, students residing in the school’s attendance area (and whose parents list that school as one of five choices) will receive an enrollment priority so long as they contribute to increasing multifaceted diversity at the school (without regard to race or ethnicity). Thereafter, all applicants (from the attendance area and elsewhere) will be considered for each available seat… Students whose attendance area based on home address is a satellite zone (that is, a geographic area that is not contiguous to the school of assignment and is generally located at some distance from the school) require special consideration. These students will be treated as living in the attendance area of their highest choice school that has an attendance area, and will receive equal consideration with those students actually living in that area.” Excellence for All: A Five-Year Comprehensive Plan to Achieve Educational Equity in the San Francisco Unified School District, Revision of January 24, 2002, 98.

349. Annual Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2002.

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350. Ibid.

351. Yee's 3-prong plan to erase S.F. school enrollment woes, San Francisco Chronicle, May 21, 2002.

352. San Francisco Chronicle, “Divide and Demagogue,” Editorial, June 4, 2002. Even in the near-impossible event that the Board of Supervisors approved his proposal it would have need to pass muster with the school board and the State Board of Education. Ultimately, proponents of such a plan would need to prove that splitting the district would not promote discrimination or segregation.

353. Magary wrote his comments on a local school blog. Nanette Asimov, “Yee's 3-Prong Plan to Erase S.F. School Enrollment Woes,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 21, 2002.

354. Rachel Gordon, “Divvying up schools—S.F. City Hall agog,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 31, 2002. In his capacity at Lawyers Committee, Harris served as counsel for the SFNAACP in the SFNAACP and Ho cases.

355. San Francisco Chronicle, “Divide and Demagogue,” Editorial, June 4, 2002.

356. San Francisco Board of Supervisors, Resolution No. 379-02, Adopted June 3, 2002, Approved June 14, 2002. “Bravo!” wrote Diane Chin, director of CAA. “Leno's leadership in reaching out to a diverse coalition of parents, students, educators and community groups that represented all the communities of San Francisco to support this vision was important— helping to foster a momentum to provide the support our public schools need right now.” Diane Chin, “Keep Schools United,” Letter to the Editor, San Francisco Chronicle, June 6, 2002.

357. “If I had my druthers, we’d look at another individual school district [for the western half of the city], but that’s not going to happen.” Tiffany Maleshefski, “Admissions Outrage Escalates,” AsianWeek, April 11, 2003.

358. Enrollment Guide, 2003-2004, San Francisco Unified School District, 9; Sandra Halladey recalls PPS-SF being part of the conversation: “I remember sitting with Hydra [Mendoza] and Tony Anderson, who was the head of the EPC at that time when the Diversity Index was first being talked about, and very supportive of the Diversity Index but also really trying to let the bureaucrats at the district know that they would not get buy-in from parents if the end result was just: You go to the school that you add the most diversity to… And we’re like: No, you need to do it by the choice.” Interview, Sandra Halladey, August 26, 2009.

359. The district reported the following: 87 percent of kindergarteners, 91 percent of sixth graders, and 81 percent of ninth graders were assigned a school of choice; 67 percent of kindergarteners, 73 percent of sixth graders, and 64 percent of ninth graders were assigned to their top choice. Tiffany Maleshefski, “Diversity Furor,” San Francisco Independent, March 29, 2003.

360. Tiffany Maleshefski, “Diversity Furor,” San Francisco Independent, March 29, 2003.

361. Ibid.; Some high school students who had positive experiences at the less popular schools of Mission and Galileo confided that neighborhood schools may not be the sole issue. “Many Asian parents don’t want their kids going to schools that don’t have the words Lowell, Lincoln or Washington in them,” remarked Dolores Lee, a student at Galileo. “They think that if their kids go to a school with a perceived bad reputation, then their kids will be looked down upon and lose face.” Crystal Cao, a student at Mission, agreed. Reputation is also a worry of parents (May Chow, “S.F. Schools Assignment Controversy Continues: Some Students say Distance Doesn’t Matter,” AsianWeek, April 18, 2003).

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362. Ray Delgado, “New Offers on S.F. School Assignments,” San Francisco Chronicle, April

10, 2003.

363. Zhao’s daughter Lona was not offered an assignment to any of her chosen high schools (Lowell, Lincoln, and Washington). Although Zhao lived only several blocks away from Lincoln his daughter was assigned to Burton on the east side.

364. 三藩市联合校区排位风波报道之十:战果扩大,未获全胜 Chinese Times, April 10, 2003. [Original: 他呼籲所有小学和初中的家长继续出来, 帮助高中生的家长们抗争 […] 大家异口同声说:“不接受.”]

365. May Chow, “S.F. Schools Assignment Controversy Continues: Some Students say Distance Doesn’t Matter,” AsianWeek, April 18, 2003. The meeting was called by San Francisco Supervisor Fiona Ma.

366. For the 2003-2004 school year, approximately 34 percent of the ninth graders in the school district identified as Chinese; at Washington, 49 percent of the incoming ninth grade class identified as Chinese; at Lincoln, approximately 57 percent of the incoming ninth grade class identified as Chinese. San Francisco Unified School District, Profiles. 2003-2004.

367. Washington High School received approximately 2,800 requests for 591 available seats. Lincoln High School received approximately 3,200 requests for its 586 available seats. 三藩市联合校区排位风波报道之十:战果扩大,未获全胜. Chinese Times, April 10, 2003; Ray Delgado, “Schools Forum Ends in Anger,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 1, 2003.

368. Ray Delgado, “Schools Forum Ends in Anger,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 1, 2003.

369. The special hearing was held on April 29, 2003. Ray Delgado, “Schools Forum Ends in Anger,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 1, 2003.

370. Ray Delgado, “Schools Forum Ends in Anger,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 1, 2003.

371. Caroline Grannan, “SFUSD Shell Game,” Letter to the Editor, AsianWeek, May 16, 2003.

372. The parent’s name was Zhang Yi. 路漫漫兮其修遠 家長爭取子女區內上學紀實. Sing Tao Daily, May 20, 2003. [Original: 家長張藝憤怒地指出﹕“如果我們的孩子連鄰近的學校都去不了,學區憑什麼要我們支持放發教育公債﹖]. The school facilities bond passed in November 2003 with support from two-thirds of San Francisco voters (Proposition A).

373. Ray Delgado, “Parents Storm Ackerman's Office,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 20, 2003; 路漫漫兮其修遠家長爭取子女區內上學紀實, Sing Tao Daily, May 20, 2003; Daniel Quach, “Chronicle Biased for S.F. Superintendent,” Letter to the Editor, AsianWeek, May 30, 2003; Joan Walsh, “John Zhao’s Crusade,” San Francisco Magazine, September 1, 2003; Interview, Matt Kelemen, August 11, 2009.

374. Ray Delgado, “Parents Storm Ackerman's Office,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 20, 2003; Matt Kelemen, a special assistant to the Superintendent who attended the meeting described it as “probably the scariest day we’ve ever had at the district” (Interview, Matt Kelemen, August 11, 2009).

375. San Francisco Chronicle, “Parents Behaving Badly,” Editorial, May 23, 2003.

376. Ackerman, who is African American and had been bused to an all-white high school, remarked: “Well, it's really too painful for me. I'm sitting here now as a product of that time, as somebody who bore the pain of desegregating schools. We couldn't even have lunch with the other kids in the lunchroom. So I have this very vivid history and pain around this issue. And these are people who've been

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the recipients of what the civil rights movement achieved.” John Zhao’s Crusade, San Francisco Magazine, September 1, 2003.

377. Interview, Matt Kelemen, August 11, 2009.

378. “We still have to deal with the inequities in the system,” commented Mar. “And neighborhood schools aren’t the answer.” Joan Walsh, “John Zhao’s Crusade,” San Francisco Magazine, September 1, 2003.

379. On the division between the two groups, John Zhao said, “From the beginning, I was never interested in forming a formal organization with a formal name. Once PFNSA was formed, it was a political group and I don’t want to be part of a political group because I’m not interested in that.” May Chow, “Parent Group Fights for Neighborhood Schools: Kids boycotting schools in San Francisco,” AsianWeek, September 19, 2003.

380. Tiffany Maleshefski, “Parents Keep Kids Out of First Day of School,” AsianWeek, August 29, 2003.

381. Heather Knight, “Chinese Americans End School Protest,” San Francisco Chronicle, October 3, 2003.

382. Julie Soo, “Chinese Americans still Feel Left Out of the School Diversity Dialogue,” AsianWeek, June 10, 2004.

383. For example, to entice parents to consider high schools beyond Lowell, Lincoln, and Washington, Ackerman promised to establish a Chinese immersion program at Balboa and to increase the number of Advanced Placement classes at Galileo. Tiffany Maleshefski, “Admissions Outrage Escalates,” AsianWeek, April 11, 2003; With the focused attention from the district central office and a committed onsite staff, over a period of years two developed into well-regarded high schools of choice in their own right. See Interviews with Caroline Grannan, June 30, 2009; Sandra Halladey, August 26, 2009; and, Frank Chong, October 6, 2009.

384. Julian Guthrie, “Parents and Teachers may soon Control S.F. School Funds,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 16, 2002.

385. Weighted Student Formula was incorporated in Excellence for All, 68-69; Julian Guthrie, “Parents and Teachers may soon Control S.F. School Funds,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 16, 2002.

386. Julian Guthrie, “Parents and Teachers may soon Control S.F. School Funds,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 16, 2002. Parents and teachers in SFUSD are served by the Second District of the California Congress of Parents, Teachers, and Students. In addition to the PTA, Parents for Public Schools also registered their support for weighted student formulas.

387. Under some Weighted Student Formula plans, particularly when site councils are provided wide latitude over personnel line items, “there is an economic interest in getting rid of experienced teachers that completely sidesteps whether or not they’re effective or working.” However, the union was satisfied that across schools, regardless of neighborhood or quality, there is a relatively even distribution of experienced teachers. “The whole myth that teachers will work at a bad school for a few years and then they’ll just want to get out and go to a good school simply didn’t [hold].” Interview, Dennis Kelly, August 13, 2009.

388. Students and Teachers Achieving Results Brochure, Attachments to the State Board of Education Annual Report, Attachment 15.1. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1342, 8/15/03).

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389. STAR Initiative elementary schools: Bret Harte, Carver, Chavez, Cleveland, Drew, El

Dorado, Fairmount, Flynn, Glen Park, Golden Gate, Malcolm X, Marshall, McKinley, Milk, Monroe, Muir, Revere, Sanchez, Serra, Starr King, Swett, Treasure Island, and Webster. STAR Initiative middle schools: Burbank, Davis, Denman, Everett, Franklin, King, Lick, Mann, and Maxwell. STAR Initiative high schools: Balboa, Burton, Galileo, Marshall, McAteer, Mission, and O’Connell. Excellence for All: A Five-Year Comprehensive Plan to Achieve Educational Equity in the San Francisco Unified School District, Revision of January 24, 2002, Attachment H.

390. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2002 (p. 67). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1306, 7/31/02).

391. The STAR program provided: (1) School Personnel. Instructional reform facilitators, long term substitutes, parent liaisons, middle school advisors, and volunteer mentors/tutors; (2) District Support. Instructional walk-throughs, school site plan review process, leadership development workshops; and, (3) Resources. Test prep packets, extend learning packets, $150 for teaching supplies for each teacher, additional resources to enhance libraries, and resources for parent centers. Students and Teachers Achieving Results Brochure, Attachments to the State Board of Education Annual Report, Attachment 15.1. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1342, 8/15/03).

392. “Our data holistically suggest that the STAR Schools Program clearly benefits participating schools” Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2002, 67. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1306, 7/31/02); “The District’s STAR schools program is aggressively targeting low performing schools, and we commend the District for its ongoing efforts in this regard” Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2003, 85. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1340, 7/31/03). See also Interview, Dan Kelly, September 8, 2009.

393. Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, July 31, 2003 (p. 85). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1340; 8/5/03).

394. The comparison was based on 2003 Academic Performance Index (API) base scores for African American students in Los Angeles, Oakland, Sacramento City, Long Beach, and San Diego. Supplemental Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, Stuart Biegel, March 12, 2004. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1356; 3/12/04).

395. Minutes, Evidentiary hearing August 3, 2004. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1374, 8/3/04); Order Denying Proposed Extension of Consent Decree. SFNAACP v. SFUSD, 413 F.Supp.2d 1051 (2005).

396. Order Denying Proposed Extension. SFNAACP, 413 F.Supp.2d at 1061.

397. Heather Knight, “Arlene Ackerman S.F. School Chief to Point to Back-to-Basics Success,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 21, 2004; Heather Knight, “Dream Schools Strive to Raise Bar for Kids,” San Francisco Chronicle, August 30, 2004. The Dream Schools initiative was based on schools founded by Lorraine Monroe in Harlem. “Flat out, flat out: the mission is all these kids are going to college,” Monroe told a group of Bayview-Hunters Point parents. “We're saying everybody in the Dream Schools is gifted and talented. We're going to surprise everybody and astonish the kids in terms of what they're capable of doing” (Heather Knight, “Fanfare Follows OK of Plan for Charter Dream Schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 19, 2004).

398. Heather Knight, “Plan for Smaller Schools,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 22, 2004. “Who wouldn’t want that?” asked school board member Sandra Lee Fewer, recalling Ackerman’s promise to provide private school education for public school children. “I knew parents, black parents that pulled their kids out from other schools and brought them there, and it became racially segregated schools. And, you know, with racially segregated schools… you have hard-to-fill slots for teachers. It is hard to attract the best and brightest. And those children there, they need… exceptional teaching” (Interview, Sandra Lee Fewer, August 4, 2009).

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399. The first Dream Schools were Charles Drew Elementary, Twenty-First Century Academy

(K-8), and Gloria R. Davis Middle schools. In 2005, the school board voted to rename Twenty-First Century Academy to Willie L. Brown Jr. College Preparatory Academy, in honor of the city’s first African American mayor. The plan was to create a Dream School corridor from preschool to high school, with Gloria R Davis middle school adding one grade a year until it reached 12th grade. However, this was never done, and the school was closed in 2007 due to low enrollment and a poor achievement record. Heather Knight, “Arlene Ackerman S.F. School Chief to Point to Back-to-Basics Success,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 21, 2004; Heather Knight, “Dream Schools Strive to Raise Bar for Kids,” San Francisco Chronicle, August 30, 2004; Jill Tucker, “Davis Middle School to Close in Bayview,” San Francisco Chronicle, January 11, 2007.

400. Interview, Hoover Liddell, October 24, 2009.

401. Superintendent says quality segregated schools an option, San Francisco Examiner, May 17, 2005.

402. Dream Schools plan angers union , San Francisco Chronicle, February 6, 2004.

403. Union won't resist Dream plan, San Francisco Chronicle, February 12, 2004. Teachers attending the school board meeting expressed no reservations with reapplying for their positions. In April, the district reported receiving 400 applications for the 100 open teacher and administrator positions (Applicants begin lining up for Dream Schools positions, San Francisco Chronicle, April 30, 2004).

404. Stipulation and Order. Ho v. SFUSD (DF624, 10/19/04).

405. Dream Schools strive to raise bar for kids, San Francisco Chronicle, August 30, 2004.

406. City's Dream Schools open doors on a new era, San Francisco Chronicle, August 31, 2004.

407. Reporter’s Transcript, Proceedings, October 14, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1496; 1/25/06).

408. Plans were made for Dream Schools in the Mission District (Sanchez Elementary, Everett Middle, John O’Connell High), Bernal Heights (Paul Revere Elementary), Western Addition (Ben Franklin Middle), and Potrero Hill (Enola Maxwell Middle, Treasure Island K-8). The board has since closed Ben Franklin, Treasure Island, and Enola Maxwell. Dream Schools program to expand, October 1, 2004.

409.. Fanfare follows OK of plan for charter Dream Schools, San Francisco Chronicle, March 19, 2004. Although some students were less enthused with the initiative. “All the change I have seen from the Dream School is that we wear uniforms and the administration has made a lot more rules that interfere with the students learning,” wrote John O’Connell senior Blaise Didier (O’Connell became a Dream School in 2005). Letter to the Court from Blaise Didier. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1464, 10/12/05).

410. Interview, Carl Barnes, August 13, 2009.

411. Interview, Sandra Lee Fewer, August 4, 2009. There are, of course, different perspectives on the issue. Some observers felt that the Dream Schools initiative was, in fact, community-based because many Bayview-Hunters Point residents supported it. Interview, Dan Kelly, September 8, 2009.

412. “The Dream School was torpedoed by the teacher’s union in the beginning,” stated former school board commissioner Dan Kelly. “I think the Dream Schools could have been successful if the teachers union hadn’t selectively opposed them” (Interview, Dan Kelly, September 8, 2009.

413. Long days at Dream Schools, San Francisco Chronicle, October 5, 2004.

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414. Eddie Chin, Heather Hiles, Dan Kelly, and Jill Wynns were considered to be Ackerman

backers; Sarah Lipson, Eric Mar, and Mark Sanchez were vocal critics.

415. Schools' politics focus on Ackerman. San Francisco Chronicle, October 12, 2004. See also Blacks Concerned Board Race May Divide Vote And Hurt Superintendent, San Francisco Sun-Reporter, July 15, 2004.

416. Will Pressure Force Ackerman To Retire? San Francisco Sun-Reporter, August 11, 2005. The school board was faced with a $22 million budget gap. Closing schools had to be part of the calculus. “The budget crisis is so severe, and we just have no other options,” commissioner Mar stated (Budget squeeze threatens school, the island's treasure. San Francisco Chronicle, May 24, 2005).

417. Final Supplemental Report of Consent Decree Monitor Regarding Desegregation and Academic Achievement, December 28, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1494, 12/28/05). Ackerman responded that resegregation was an issue that needed to be addressed wholesale. “We can't solve this issue as a school district without the larger San Francisco community and the governmental agencies and community organizations helping us” (S.F. schools are resegregating, monitor charges, San Francisco Chronicle, January 4, 2006).

418. Interview, Jill Wynns, June 16, 2009.

419. Chinese Americans renew school placement push, San Francisco Chronicle, March 31, 2005.

420. New plan pitched for neighborhood schools, San Francisco Chronicle, May 17, 2005.

421. Interview, Norman Yee, May 19, 2009.

422. Lisa Schiff, “School Beat: Redefining Student Assignment,” BeyondChron, May 19, 2005; Community Advisory Committee on Student Assignment , “Recommendations for Student Assignment in the San Francisco Unified School District,” February 22, 2005. Because of new immigrants from Mexico, Central America, and Asia, neighborhoods (including Bayview-Hunters Point) were ever more diverse.

423. Order scheduling hearing re: proposed modifications to consent decree, Attachment. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1443, 8/26/05).

424. Response to written public comments filed with court in response to notice of proposed modification of consent. Ho v. SFUSD. (DF692, 10/12/05).

425. Response to written public comments filed with court in response to notice of proposed modification of consent. Ho v. SFUSD. (DF692, 10/12/05). Reverend Amos Brown, writing in his capacity as head of the SFNAACP, made similar comments to the court.

426. Chan lived in the 94134 ZIP code. Response to written public comments filed with court in response to notice of proposed modification of consent. Ho v. SFUSD. (DF692, 10/12/05).

427. This demographic information was determined by noting the zip codes and surnames of respondents. Response to public comments regarding proposed settlement. Ho v. SFUSD (DF692, 10/12/05).

428. Response to public comments regarding proposed settlement. Ho v. SFUSD (DF692, 10/12/05).

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429. Superintendent says quality segregated schools an option. San Francisco Examiner, May 17,

2005.

430. Reporter’s Transcript, Proceedings, October 14, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1496; 1/25/06).

431. Order Denying Proposed Extension. SFNAACP, 413 F.Supp.2d at 1072.

432. Judge criticizes desegregation plan. San Francisco Chronicle, October 21, 2005. The public hearing on the modifications to the consent decree was held on October 14, 2005. See also SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1469, 10/14/05).

433. The consent decree had previously received a three year extension, from December 31, 2002 to December 31, 2005. “[C]ounsel, perhaps accustomed to stipulations rather than formal motions and expecting the Court to acquiesce, simply stipulated to modify the consent decree and extend federal court supervision another eighteen months.” Order Denying Proposed Extension. SFNAACP, 413 F.Supp.2d at 1063.

434. SFNAACP, 59 F.Supp.2d 1021, 1038.

435. Ho by Ho v. SFUSD, 147 F. 3d at 865.

436. Reporter’s Transcript, Proceedings, October 14, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1496; 1/25/06).

437. Ibid.

438. Order Denying Proposed Extension. SFNAACP, 413 F.Supp.2d at 1072.

439. Ibid. Alsup refers to the failed attempts by MALDEF, META, CAA, UESF and others to formally intervene in the case.

440. Reporter’s Transcript, Proceedings, October 14, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1496; 1/25/06).

441. Ibid.

442. Reverend Derrick Eva was associate pastor of Providence Baptist Church. Reporter’s Transcript, Proceedings, October 14, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1496; 1/25/06).

443. Reporter’s Transcript, Proceedings, October 14, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1496; 1/25/06).

444. Supplemental Report of the Consent Decree Monitor, April 11, 2005. Ho v. SFUSD (DF651, 4/11/05).

445. Reporter’s Transcript, Proceedings, October 14, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1496; 1/25/06).

446. Judge criticizes desegregation plan, San Francisco Chronicle, October 21, 2005.

447. Alsup determined that counsel failed to show how modifying the consent decree would satisfy the Dowell/Freeman test or an alternative legal standard for modifying consent decrees in institutional reform cases (the so-called Rufo standard). SFNAACP, 413 F. Supp. 2d at 1064-1072.

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448. Freeman, 503 U.S. at 490.

449. Order Denying Proposed Extension. SFNAACP, 413 F.Supp.2d at 1063.

450. Letter to Judge William Alsup from David Johnson, December 28, 2005. SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1495, 1/17/06).

451. Final Supplemental Report of the Consent Decree Monitor Regarding Desegregation and Academic Achievement, December 28, 2005 (p. 5). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1494, 12/28/05).

452. S.F. schools are resegregating, monitor charges. San Francisco Chronicle, January 4, 2006.

453. Final Supplemental Report of the Consent Decree Monitor Regarding Desegregation and Academic Achievement, December 28, 2005 (p. 8). SFNAACP v. SFUSD (DF1494, 12/28/05).

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Conclusion

Fundamentally, Brown addressed school district student assignment policy. Accepted

notions of the means by which students were to be assigned to schools were disrupted by

the Supreme Court’s recognition that in public education “the doctrine of ‘separate but

equal’ has no place.”1 While Brown dealt directly with the de jure segregation prevalent

throughout the South, its impact (and that of string the school discrimination lawsuits that

followed) was felt in the de facto segregated districts of the North and West. In the

decades following the decision, policymakers, parents, advocates, activists, and other

stakeholders in urban districts across the country struggled over the terms and conditions

of student assignment. Examining the contours of these struggles sheds light on the

complicated community politics that emerge when new stakeholders challenge policy

arrangements in public education that established stakeholders seek to protect.

Institutions in education are inertial in ways that student demographics are not.

San Francisco experienced gradual demographic shifts similar to Los Angeles, Oakland,

Seattle, and other urban cities in the West: the arrival and subsequent departure of

African American families, the arrival of immigrant families from Mexico and countries

throughout Central America and Asia, and the departure of white families. As San

Francisco’s student population changed, pre-existing assignment schemes were

considered by some to be no longer tenable. The result was two protracted episodes of

community mobilization, each with a class action lawsuit at its center. Fueling

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mobilization were changing societal attitudes toward student assignment and an evolving

desegregation and affirmative action jurisprudence.

In the study, I employed a purposefully broad view of community mobilization

that took into account collaborative and contentious interplay among private and public

sector actors engaged in the education policymaking process. Student assignment

policymaking was complex. Policy alternatives were developed by the superintendent

and her or his cabinet, and approved by the school board. Preferred alternatives were

stipulated by the parties, originally with the SFNAACP as class representative for

African American students, then with the SFNAACP as class representative for all

students, and finally with Ho representing the subclass of Chinese students. Under the

consent decree, the state directed desegregation funds to the district and created the

regulatory environment within which student assignment was confined. Decisions were

ultimately made by the federal district court, and in a few instances, the Ninth Circuit. All

the while, numerous community stakeholders sought to intervene, formally and

informally, through political and legal channels, with varying degrees of success.

The analytical focus of the dissertation is the role of cultural characterizations in

the student assignment policy process. In San Francisco, three logics of action—

integration, choice, and neighborhood— influenced student assignment by constraining

and guiding the course and content of policy. Logics were stable but not fixed. They were

available for elaboration and manipulation by community stakeholders. Political

contention over cultural characterizations of student assignment led to fundamental

policy shifts that altered the educational experience of multiple cohorts of public school

students (see Appendix F). To this point, each episode of community mobilization was

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considered apart from the other. In the paragraphs that follow, I join the two episodes

together to explicate how cultural characterizations of integration, choice, and

neighborhood evolved over the 34 year span of court supervision.

Integration

Bipolar desegregation vs. Multipolar integration

Of the three logics of action governing student assignment in San Francisco, the most

salient was integration. Contention arose over the SFUSD’s proposal to replace Operation

Integrate (inclusive of Horseshoe) with Educational Redesign. Desegregation had been

framed and understood as a black-white issue. Its principal purpose was to correct

government racial discrimination of black students. Consequently, the definition of racial

balance was a school in which the ratio of white to black students was not substantially at

variance with the districtwide ratio of white to black students. To comply, the district

adopted a standard that each racial and ethnic subgroup at every school must fall within

15 percentage points of the subgroup’s districtwide percentage. But because of the racial

demographics of the district, schools only needed to enroll significant numbers of black

and white students, and not Latino or Asian students, in order to be compliance. The

SFNAACP and its allies vigorously fought to preserve this bipolar desegregative

characterization of the status quo policy.

Redesign amended the definition of racial balance and the compliance standard

the district applied. Unlike Horseshoe and Operation Integrate, schools would no longer

strive to have a fixed ratio of white to black students. Racial balance would instead be

defined as a school in which no racial or ethnic subgroup constituted a majority. To be in

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compliance a school would need to enroll at least four of the nine recognized racial and

ethnic subgroups, with no subgroup consisting of more than 45 percent of student

enrollment. This amounted to an alternate characterization of integration, from what I

refer to as a bipolar desegregation framework to a multipolar integration framework.

Educational Redesign was approved by the school board and the federal district court and

went into effect in the 1978-1979 school term. To the disappointment of the SFNAACP

and its allies, a school could now enroll no black students and/or no white students and

still meet the definition of racial identifiability.

With the passage of Educational Redesign, contention moved from the board

chambers to the courthouse in the form of a legal action by the SFNAACP against the

school district and state defendants. As with Johnson, the lawsuit was filed on behalf of

black students. But in 1979, the class was redefined to encompass all school children,

regardless of race or ethnicity, “now or hereafter eligible” to attend public schools in San

Francisco. After nearly five years of pre-trial maneuvers, the parties settled by agreeing

to a consent decree. The decree had two goals: eliminating racial identifiability in every

school, classroom, and program, and improving academic achievement, particularly for

underserved students. The second goal was to be achieved through a focused effort on

African American students, primarily through a special plan for Bayview-Hunters Point.

This, of course, did nothing for underserved black, Latino, Asian and white students

attending schools outside of Bayview-Hunters Point.

With the California Department of Education a party to the lawsuit, the district

was all but guaranteed a steady flow of state desegregation funding to offset costs

associated with consent decree activities. The consent decree also created a seat “at the

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decision making table” for the SFNAACP. The decree was “inviolate” observed the

court. Any changes SFUSD wanted to make to its student assignment plan would need to

be stipulated by all parties and would need final approval of the court. While the

SFNAACP had a formal role in student assignment policy, the consent decree effectively

locked out other community stakeholders, including the teachers union, the PTA, and the

numerous organizations representing San Francisco’s diverse student communities. With

immigration creating a fast growing population of English Learners, questions soon

emerged from MALDEF and other advocates regarding the SFNAACP’s ability to

adequately and fairly represent all students.

Race conscious integration vs. Race neutral diversity

In applying the new definition and standard brought about by Redesign, San Francisco

was able to substantially eliminate racial identifiability in the schools for the first eight

years or so of the consent decree.2 But by the 1990s, the district began to resegregate.

Resegregation took place during a period of renewed attention on student assignment.

The population of white and black students had been in decline since the 1970s.

Conversely, the population of Chinese and Latino students had grown rapidly. These

“drastic demographic changes” led the court to order a comprehensive evaluation of the

decree. The resulting Experts’ Report and its potential to leverage efforts to amend or

eliminate terms of the decree created an opening for stakeholders seeking to intervene in

the process through political and legal means. Beyond San Francisco, the decade saw

fundamental changes in federal desegregation and affirmative action jurisprudence. As

the Supreme Court clarified the limits of government use of racial classifications, the

nation was engaged in a dialogue on race with considerable attention focused on

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California and its “colorblind” policies. San Francisco’s student assignment system, and

in particular, its impact on Chinese American students, received national exposure and

was held up by opponents as a symbol of the failings of race conscious policy.

META’s motion to intervene on behalf of Latino and Asian students, although

supported by the board of education, was denied by the court. While Judge Orrick

acknowledged that the SFNAACP lacked expertise on issues impacting English learners,

he determined that school desegregation “with respect to all races” was an interest it

could adequately represent. With no serious criticism leveled on SFNAACP’s

representation, intervention was not permitted. (Had META been allowed to intervene, it

is entirely possible that a compromise solution would have been crafted that CADC

found acceptable.)

Outside of the court, and apart from META’s intervention, CADC mobilized its

members and directed resources toward the consent decree issue. Although advocacy

efforts aimed at the school board generated some attention, there was no indication that

the board possessed the political will to challenge the consent decree outright. CADC

shifted to a legal strategy, secured a team of attorneys, and identified class

representatives. Unlike the 1978 lawsuit, in Ho v. SFUSD, the SFNAACP was aligned

with the school district and the state representatives in defense of the consent decree’s

race conscious integration scheme. As with any school discrimination lawsuit, the lawsuit

led to divisions in the community, as stakeholders aligned with either Ho or the SFUSD

and SFNAACP. After nearly five years of pre-trial work and the gradual realization by

defendants that the law could no longer hold up the consent decree as it was currently

composed, the parties agreed to amendments that eliminated the use of racial

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classifications in student assignment. Following a brief interim period in which a default

plan was in place, the district introduced the Diversity Index Lottery in 2002. The new

system remained through the end of the consent decree in 2005 (and, in fact, continued

through the 2010-2011 school term).

During the first phase of the consent decree, student assignment was based on a

multipolar integration framework first introduced in Educational Redesign. Following

settlements in 1999 and 2001, assignment was based on a race neutral diversity

framework. Diversity was broadly defined, allowing the concept to be understood in

multiple ways. While the consent decree’s original goal of racially and ethnically diverse

schools remained, the use of racial classifications was dropped as it would almost

certainly have been considered unconstitutional if the case went to trial. So in place of

racial classifications, the Diversity Index Lottery sought to create cohort diversity based

on socioeconomic indicators. In essence, “race neutral” constrained the means but not the

ends of student assignment.

The consent decree began in 1983 on a hopeful note. But early gains made at

eliminating racial identifiability were severely curtailed starting in the 1990s.

Resegregation began during the first phase of the consent decree, under Rojas, and did

not slow following the Ho settlements. By the end of the consent decree in 2005, more

schools failed to meet the 45 percent subgroup threshold than at any time since the 1970-

1971 school year. A similar claim can be made about the consent decree’s second goal.

From as early as Educational Equality/Quality, the district recognized the value of tying

desegregation with efforts to improve the academic achievement of underserved students.

Over the years, money, specialized programs, and technical assistance were provided to

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underperforming schools throughout the eastern neighborhoods of the city. With the 1983

consent decree, the goal of improved academic achievement was made explicit. While the

achievement gap narrowed during the 1990s, it was short-lived. And by 2005, although

SFUSD’s districtwide Academic Performance Index ranking exceeded that of other urban

school districts, African American students in San Francisco possessed lower

achievement score than their African American peers in San Diego, Los Angeles, Long

Beach, Sacramento, and elsewhere.

Choice

Illegitimate vs. Legitimate

In 1971 it would have been difficult to anticipate the impending dominance of a choice

logic in San Francisco. Although parental choice was not a formal part of the Horseshoe

and Operation Integrate desegregation plans, it was part of the student assignment

system. The Temporary Attendance Permit (TAP) was intended to be used in special

circumstances—students needing specialized academic programs, students with particular

ailments, or students in situations that would warrant attendance at a non-assigned school.

In practice, it was widely understood and exploited as a means of bypassing

desegregation. The number of students requesting exceptions grew under Horseshoe such

that the SFNAACP declared closing the TAP loophole a condition before they would

agree to abandon their secondary school desegregation lawsuit. TAP requests continued

to be granted, however, and by the time Educational Redesign was introduced, a third of

the district’s students attended a school other than the one to which they were assigned

for the purpose of desegregation. Consequently, in its 1978 lawsuit, the SFNAACP

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pointed to the district’s operation of TAP as evidence of a government mechanism that

created, maintained, and increased racial segregation in violation of the law.

With Redesign, TAP was recast Optional Enrollment Request (OER). The district,

having recently placed TAP requests under the purview of its Integration Department,

promised to maintain the strictest of controls over approvals. Under OER, any applicant

could choose a school other than the one assigned for desegregation purposes. But

requests would only be granted if the transfer would not adversely impact either the

sending or receiving school’s compliance with the enrollment cap standards. In this way,

OER was Educational Redesign’s voluntary integration component. From the 1984-1985

term to the 1992-1993 term, as the district’s compliance with the integration aspect of the

consent decree indicates, there was a general enforcement of the policy. In time, OER

was understood to be a loophole in its own right. Observers charged that parents savvy

enough or connected enough to influence the district’s Educational Placement Center

would receive favorable assignments at the expense of others.3

Ancillary vs. Central

When the district introduced Educational Redesign, it legitimated the choice framework

by incorporating it directly into the plan. OER was the method for students choosing an

alternative school (e.g., Lowell High School) or requesting a different traditional school

than the one assigned. In time, choice moved from the periphery to become the principal

means of student assignment. For the 1991-1992 school year, close to 40 percent of

students were on optional enrollment permits. By the end of the decade, the OER share

had increased to 56 percent of all students. Along with its increasing popularity, choice

was becoming institutionalized through the efforts of the San Francisco chapter of

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Parents for Public Schools. Its founders were originally proponents of neighborhood

schools under the premise that schools were community institutions and that middle class

families leaving the public education system could be brought back through a concerted

community effort to revitalize neighborhood schools. But the focus of PPS-SF soon

centered around improving the choice process. The organization bridged parents and the

district, assisting parents navigating the complicated enrollment process so that the best

school choices could be made, and assisting the district’s efforts to become more

efficient, transparent, and responsive to parents.

When the district introduced Excellence for All in 2002, in the absence of

assignments based on racial classifications, choice was moved to the center of the student

assignment framework. Students no longer received an automatic assignment based on

home address. Choice requests were no longer “temporary” or “optional.” With the

Diversity Index Lottery, all applicants were asked to choose their preferred schools. The

district touted the benefits of choice and promised to diversify its portfolio of options by

offering a range of start and end times and providing a range of curricular options. Many

parents came to appreciate the freedom to choose the school down the block, close to

their work, or clear across town. But for some parents, including Chinese American

parents who had supported the campaign to eliminate enrollment caps, the Diversity

Index was a much less than ideal solution. While assignment relied on school choice,

choice was constrained. For schools with more applicants than available seats, the system

enrolled those students that contributed the most to the school’s overall socioeconomic

diversity. While the language of the district was often centered on programmatic

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diversity, and the mechanism of assignment focused on socioeconomic diversity, the

consent decree’s goal of eliminating identifiability made racial diversity an obligation.

Neighborhood

A third logic of action governed student assignment in San Francisco. A formalized

system of neighborhood schools with defined catchment areas had been a component of

the district since the 1930s. But with housing discrimination and housing patterns that fell

along race and class lines, a neighborhood school system could not be fully maintained

with desegregation as a goal. The neighborhood logic of action is robust. Throughout the

district’s era of court-supervision, neighborhood schools were never completely

abandoned by community stakeholders or by the district. Comprehensive school

desegregation was always tempered by neighborhood components. Horseshoe was

explicitly designed as a zone system that retained the “feeling of a neighborhood” by

ensuring that all students living on the same block would attend the same school.

Operation Integrate was built on a similar premise. The district touted a decrease in

busing and a return to the pre-desegregation school boundaries as the underlying basis for

Educational Redesign. These same neighborhood school boundaries remained largely

untouched during the first phase of the consent decree. Even with the Diversity Index,

when students were no longer pre-assigned to schools based on home address, traces of

the neighborhood logic of action persisted. Schools filled open seats by first considering

neighborhood applicants before applicants from outside the school’s catchment area were

considered.

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San Francisco is defined by its neighborhoods. And a neighborhood’s public

schools are often seen as important community institutions. Due to the racial geography

of the city (along with factors such as transportation lines, topographic isolation, and the

like), the experience and understanding of student assignment by residents varied across

neighborhood boundaries. Bayview-Hunters Point is situated on the edge of the city, but

it was always at the conceptual center of student assignment. The lion’s share of

desegregation resources aimed at improving academic quality targeted Bayview-Hunters

Point schools. Resistance to busing into (and to a lesser degree, busing out of) Bayview-

Hunters Point became such a flashpoint in the Educational Redesign proposal that in the

end, the neighborhood was left out of the plan’s busing provisions. And at times,

Bayview-Hunters Point served as a foil for desegregation opponents, whether it was

military families on Treasure Island, Mission District language rights advocates, or

neighborhood schools activists from the Sunset.

The present study has advanced our understanding of the politics of student assignment in

San Francisco during a 34-year span of court supervision. But its contribution is more

ambitious. As an analytical endeavor, the study is meant to be examined through two

lenses. Through the first lens, the study contributes to political sociology scholarship that

seeks to understand the role of culture, ideas, and meaning in the development of public

policy by bridging literatures on logics of action and cultural characterizations. The

second lens reveals contributions to the politics of education literature and the community

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of scholars investigating multiracial politics, community mobilization, and urban school

reform.

Political Sociology

John Campbell’s recent treatise on the problems of institutional analysis serves as a

conceptual launching point for the dissertation. Campbell argues that institutionalists

intent on developing causal arguments must better specify the mechanisms that allow

socially-constructed ideas held by particular actors to affect institutional change.

Stakeholders devise, reshape, and interpret cultural characterizations, particularly when

policy alternatives are controversial. It is through these activities that change occurs.

Such was the case with post-Brown student assignment policy in the urban school district.

(Campbell’s work is pertinent due to the conceptual similarity between institutions and

public policy, as the author points out.) Scholars have responded to Campbell’s call to

action, with Brian Steensland’s study on the mechanisms by which cultural

characterizations of worth led to the failure of Guaranteed Annual Income policy being

the most relevant to this project. Beyond Campbell, a collection of antecedent

frameworks offered by John Kingdon, Robert Self, and Deborah Stone are helpful for

similarly seeking to shed light on the mechanisms that connect culture, ideas, and

meaning to institutional or policy change.4

The dissertation joins this scholarship with work on logics. Logics are those sets

of “material practices and symbolic constructions” that provide meaning and guidance for

behavior. Political contest can occur in situations where organizational fields are

governed by multiple logics of action. Actors mobilize to defend the practices, principles,

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and policies of one logic against another or others. This mobilization can spur change

under the right conditions. Logics are thus similar to cultural characterizations. However,

curiously, these lines of investigation stand apart.5

In the conceptualization of the study, cultural characterizations are components of

logics of action. In essence, they constitute a subset of a logic’s material practices and

symbolic constructions. While logics of action emphasize the practices and constructions

that influence activity in an organizational field, cultural characterizations tend to

emphasize the practices and constructions that influence the trajectory of public policy.

For example, U.S. welfare policy is influenced by the segmenting of low-income people

as either “deserving” or “undeserving.”6 These cultural characterizations can be regarded

as part of a larger logic of equitable access when considering the role they serve in

guiding behavior throughout the public benefits field. Work on cultural characterizations

focuses on tension within logics, while work on logics often bypasses tension within and

instead focuses on competition across logics. By situating cultural characterizations

within logics of action, scholars are rewarded with a nuanced framework that can

simultaneously account for contentious and collaborative politics across logics (as in

Scott’s study of the health care field) and within logics (as in Steensland’s study of

welfare policy). As I describe in the study, in San Francisco, competing cultural

characterizations influenced how integration, choice, and neighborhood were shaped,

framed, and understood. At the same time, integration, choice, and neighborhood logics

of action competed for dominance over student assignment policy.

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Politics of Education

A recurring theme in education research is that the mobilization of community

stakeholders can enhance or disrupt the public education policymaking process.

Mobilization takes a range of forms, from the collaborative politics demonstrated by a

community’s sustained effort to work cooperatively across public and private sector lines,

to the contentious but contained politics that involve advocacy by community

stakeholders on behalf of a larger constituency, to the contentious politics that transgress

institutionalized activities through social movements.7 During sustained episodes of

community mobilization, where multiple public and private sector actors have varying

stakes in the issue, it is not uncommon for all three forms to emerge. Such was the case in

San Francisco.

By examining how cultural characterizations embedded in competing logics of

action influenced the course and content of student assignment policy, the dissertation

offers a fine-grained understanding of the process of community mobilization and the

ways private and public sector actors engage to bring about policy change in urban

education reform. In addition, the central framework of the study is analogous to recent

research that considers the implementation and outcome of education policy to be

contingent on culture, ideas, and meaning.8 To this line of scholarship, the dissertation

demonstrates how the manipulation of cultural characterizations by local implementers

can delay, diminish, and disrupt the intentions of distal policymakers, for better or for

worse.

The politics of student assignment in San Francisco are archetypal for those of the

multiracial city. Over the last half century, episodic community mobilization shaped by

logics of integration, choice, and neighborhood has influenced the assignment of students

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to schools in districts all throughout the nation, from New York to Chicago to Los

Angeles. While desegregation jurisprudence narrowed and the public’s taste for induced

integration crumbled, to this day, hundreds of school districts remain under court

supervision (though many of these cases are languishing on court dockets).9 Furthermore,

racially diverse schools remains a value that many education policymakers,

administrators, teachers, parents, and students maintain. With integration present but in

decline, choice became increasingly popular. Beyond the choice embodied in the charter

school and school voucher methods of reform, some urban districts have employed a

system of parental choice akin to San Francisco’s diversity index. Finally, the

neighborhood school has always been and continues to be a powerful conceptualization

of appropriate student assignment.

Public education is beset by cultural characterizations and competing logics of

action in many areas of policy and reform. Policy alternatives to important issues in

education— the achievement gap, school accountability, teacher quality—are contested.

In order to explain the political dynamics of these issues, an understanding of how

rhetorical, cognitive, and constitutive mechanisms connect cultural characterizations to

change may be necessary. The politics of education discipline would therefore benefit

from additional research (beyond student assignment) that seeks to address how cultural

characterizations affect the development of education policy.

The three logics of action—neighborhood, choice, and integration—extend

beyond student assignment and even public education. They are resonant with broader,

societal logics of contemporary America. Neighborhood calls to mind the localism that is

so deeply engrained in American society that it is an ever-present theme that runs

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throughout our nation’s history. School choice has its basis in a societal logic of

liberalism. Where earlier decades favored high levels of government involvement in

social programs, in more recent decades, privileging market-based mechanisms—

including competition and choice—as solutions to social problems has gained widespread

acceptance in American society.

Integration connects to a third societal logic dominant in the United States, that of

opportunity. Children learn from an early age that they have the potential to attend any

university, work in any profession, and attain any status. Nothing is impossible. The only

limitation, they are told, is one’s own perseverance. It is often through education that

opportunity for success in life is realized. As described in the opening paragraph of the

dissertation, educational opportunity was the underlying basis of the Brown decision. In a

statement that bears repeating, Chief Justice Warren declared, “Such an opportunity,

where the state has undertaken to provide it, is a right which must be made available to

all on equal terms.”10

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Notes

1. Brown, 347 U.S. at 495. Opinion of the Court delivered by Chief Justice Warren.

2. The district was less successful at meeting the consent decree’s additional integrative elements: eliminating racial identifiability in every classroom and program.

3. In a dust-up that generated considerable press, a well-known political figure was accused of pulling strings at the Educational Placement Center to attain a better school. The incident was vividly recalled by several informants years after it occurred.

4. Campbell, Institutional Change; Steensland, “Cultural Categories”; Kingdon, Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies; Self, American Babylon; Stone, Policy Paradox.

5. Friedland and Alford, “Bringing Society Back In”; For an example of competing logics of action, see Scott and others, Institutional Change and Healthcare Organization.

6. Katz, The Undeserving Poor.

7. Examples of Collaborative: Stone 1998; Stone et al., 2001; Clarke et al., 2006; Contained: Deschenes et al, 2006; McLaughlin et al. 2009; Transgressive: Tilly & Tarroy, 2007; Snow & Soule, 2010.

8. Spillane et al., 2006; Hill, 2006

9. Order Denying Proposed Extension. SFNAACP, 413 F.Supp.2d at 1065; A reliable source for the total number of schools and school districts under court order to desegregate and/or under a voluntarily imposed program to desegregate could not be found. In the 1970s, the Department of Justice supervised cases representing 540 school districts. As of 2007, the United States was a party to 266 school desegregation lawsuits. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Becoming Less Separate? School Desegregation, Justice Department Enforcement, and the Pursuit of Unitary Status (Washington, DC, 2007).

10. Brown, 347 U.S. at 493.

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Methodological Addendum

To reconstruct the politics of student assignment in San Francisco, I assembled political

discourse and action of private and public sector stakeholders attempting to influence the

course and content of district policy. I focused on three institutional realms critical to

student assignment during the post-Brown era—the school district, local media, and the

federal court. In order to get a “feel” for the data and to develop a systematic method for

determining which archival documents to include in my corpus (internal school district

memo, court transcript, newspaper editorial, and the like), I conducted a pre-dissertation

proposal round of data collection that focused on court and school district records related

to the 1970 desegregation lawsuit filed by the SFNAACP against the SFUSD.1

The following procedure to determine which documents to consider emerged

during this round of data collection: (1) The document pertains to student assignment in

San Francisco during the episodes of contention preceding and following the transition

from Operation Integrate to Educational Redesign and the transition from the first to

second phase of the 1983 consent decree. (2) The document features at least a single

instance of political discourse or action, by which I mean activity whose implicit or

explicit intent is to influence the student assignment policy making process. (3) The

“target” or “originator” of the instance of political discourse or symbolic action must be a

community stakeholder: a policymaker, the district, a local community organization, or

1. Johnson, 339 F. Supp.

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an individual acting on behalf of a community organization. Local community

organizations include local chapters of a regional or national organization (e.g., San

Francisco NAACP). (4) The “target” or “originator” claims to represent an identifiable

constituency. Interest representation may be a core or ancillary organizational feature.

The process constituted a “step zero” in which a subset of documents directly relevant to

the study were culled from the numerous district, court, and organizational records that

exist. These criteria guided my exploration, but the process was not entirely rigid. I often

allowed myself to include data that I stumbled upon or that was only tangentially relevant

but out of the ordinary. While the task was time consuming, two factors worked in my

favor. First, school integration was a prominent educational issue and archivists have

consequently cataloged documents using integration or desegregation as a major series or

subseries topic. Second, relatively recent technology has vastly improved the capability

to perform subject searches on archival records. Online finding aids and internet news

archive search tools allow for a focused exploration of historical organizational and

newspaper archives. Archival documents deemed relevant were photocopied, digitally

scanned, or transcribed and then filed. Following most data collection sessions, I

reflected on important anecdotes, hunches, and impressions. At regular periods, I

produced analytical memos to help guide the remaining collection process and determine

what’s important and relevant.

I was aided by several guides on the conduct of case study analysis.2 Although

my conceptual framework evolved over time, from the very beginning and throughout the

2. Eisenhardt, “Building Theories”; Yin, “Case Study Research”; Gary Anderson,

Fundamentals of educational research (London: The Falmer Press, 1990); Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss, The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research (Hawthorne, NY: Aldine Transaction, 1967).

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study, Campbell’s (2004) typology of ideas and his discussion on the role of ideational

entrepreneurs across institutional realms served as a guide. My general strategy was to

first describe the process of community mobilization and the racial politics of student

assignment in San Francisco, decompose the process into its basic ideational causes

features, and then reassemble those causes and features into a more general account of

how the processes took place.3

Data analysis took place at the same time as I was collecting new data. And so a

recursive process developed whereby later data collection was influenced by prior data

analysis. Early in the process, I read through data pertaining to discrete periods of time

from multiple sources in parallel, in order to develop a synthesized, fine-grained

understanding of the sequence of events, from the 1970s to the 2000s. For instance, at the

same time I reflected on my notes from the docket files of Ho v. SFUSD regarding a 1998

Ninth Circuit appeal of a summary judgment ruling, I also read newspaper articles,

district pronouncements, and internal community organization memos, and scanned

informant interviews relating to this period of time.

From here, I conducted several semi-iterative rounds of coding. Early rounds

involved open coding, inventing codes, and applying them to instances of political

rhetoric and activity. During these rounds, I focused on data from SFNAACP and Ho

docket files and stakeholder interviews, where the rhetorical and cognitive elements of

student assignment seemed to be most readily apparent. Some broad categories, acquired

from literature or developed from the data, emerged, including “prognostic,”

“diagnostic,” “motivational,” “definitional,” “racialized,” and “deracialized.” With each

3. Tilly and Tarrow, Contentious Politics.

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iteration, codes and subcodes became more focused. Examples of codes during later

rounds include the following: “deservingness,” “safety as proxy for segregation

preference,” “threat of boycott,” and “discrimination.” Throughout the coding process, I

wrote analytic memos describing “off the cuff” impressions as a means of refining my

initial set of codes. In some cases, memos occurred line by line. In other cases, memos

were more of a broad impression of entire text samples.

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Appendix

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Map 2. SFUSD Elementary Schools (partial list)

Data Source: San Francisco Unified School District. (ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

1 Alamo 20 George Washington Carver 39 Sanchez 2 Alice Fong Yu Alternative 21 Glen Park 40 Spring Valley 3 Alvarado 22 Golden Gate 41 Starr King 4 Argonne 23 Gordon J. Lau (C. Stockton) 42 Sunnyside 5 Bret Harte 24 Grattan 43 Sunset 6 Bryant 25 Jean Parker 44 Sutro 7 Buena Vista Alternative 26 John Muir 45 Treasure Island (closed) 8 Cabrillo (closed) 27 Junipero Serra 46 Twenty-First Century (closed) 9 Cesar Chavez 28 Lafayette 47 Ulloa

10 Claire Lilienthal 29 Lakeshore 48 Visitacion Valley 11 Cleveland 30 Leonard R. Flynn 49 West Portal 12 Daniel Webster 31 Malcolm X 50 William De Avila 13 Dr. Charles R. Drew 32 Marshall 51 Yick Woo 14 Dr. William Cobb 33 McKinley 15 E.R. Taylor 34 Miraloma 16 Edison 35 Monroe 17 El Dorado 36 New Traditions 101 “Colored” School (closed) 18 Francis Scott Key 37 Ortega 102 “Chinese” School (closed) 19 Garfield 38 Paul Revere 103 “Oriental” School (closed)

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Map 3. SFUSD Middle Schools (partial list)

Data Source: San Francisco Unified School District. (ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

1 Aptos 11 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (formerly Portola) 2 Luther Burbank (closed) 12 James Lick 3 Central (never opened) 13 Horace Mann 4 Gloria R. Davis (closed) 14 Marina 5 James Denman 15 Enola D. Maxwell (closed) 6 Everett 16 Pelton (now Thurgood Marshall High) 7 Francisco 17 Presidio 8 Benjamin Franklin (closed) 18 Roosevelt 9 A.P. Giannini 19 Visitacion Valley

10 Herbert Hoover

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Map 4. SFUSD High Schools (partial list)

Data Source: San Francisco Unified School District. (ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

1 Balboa 2 Phillip & Sala Burton Academic (formerly Woodrow Wilson) 3 Downtown 4 Galileo Academy of Science & Technology 5 Abraham Lincoln 6 Lowell 7 Thurgood Marshall Academic (formerly Pelton Middle) 8 Mission 9 John O'Connell Alternative

10 School of the Arts (formerly McAteer) 11 Raoul Wallenberg 12 George Washington

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Map 5. African American population of San Francisco, 1970

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Map 6. African American population of San Francisco, 2000

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Data Source: Minnesota Population Center. National Historical Geographic Information System: Pre-release Version 0.1. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota 2004.

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Map 7. Chinese population of San Francisco, 1970

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Map 8. Chinese population of San Francisco, 2000

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Data Source: Minnesota Population Center. National Historical Geographic Information System: Pre-release Version 0.1. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota 2004.

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Map 9. Latino population of San Francisco, 1970

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Map 10. Latino population of San Francisco, 2000

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Data Source: Minnesota Population Center. National Historical Geographic Information System: Pre-release Version 0.1. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota 2004.

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Map 11. White population of San Francisco, 1970

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Map 12. White population of San Francisco, 2000

N.B. Each dot represents 50 residents.

(ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

Data Source: Minnesota Population Center. National Historical Geographic Information System: Pre-release Version 0.1. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota 2004.

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Map 13. San Francisco Unified School District Horseshoe Plan

Data Source: Horseshoe Plan (7/1/71) Johnson v. SFUSD. RG 21, NARA. (ESRI ArcMap 10.0)

N.B. Boundaries are approximate.

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Appendix A. Informants

Rosario Anaya April 15, 2010

Olivia Araiza June 17, 2009

Carl Barnes August 13, 2009

Stuart Biegel May 22, 2009

Arthur Brunwasser January 27, 2010

David Campos July 29, 2009

Douglas Chan August 26, 2009

Amy Chang February 10, 2010

Lee Cheng August 22, 2009

Bernadette Chi July 20, 2009

Diane Chin February 4, 2010

Eddie Chin October 9, 2009

Frank Chong October 6, 2009

Ron Chun August 26, 2009

Sheila Chung Hagen July 29, 2009

Ronald Cruz February 13, 2010

Carlotta Del Portillo November 4, 2009

Libby Denebeim September 8, 2009 September 14, 2009

Henry Der September 2, 2009

Shanta Driver September 12, 2009

Sandra Lee Fewer August 4, 2009

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Bayard Fong October 19, 2009

Daniel Girard August 24, 2009

Ruth Grabowski June 16, 2009

Amy Graff September 29, 2009

Caroline Grannan June 30, 2009

Sandra Halladey August 26, 2009

Mary Hernandez June 15, 2009

K.C. Jones August 11, 2009

Matt Kelemen August 11, 2009

Dan Kelly September 8, 2009

Dennis Kelly August 13, 2009

Jane Kim June 18, 2009

Anthony Lee September 30, 2009

Louis Hop Lee October 27, 2009

Myong Leigh October 19, 2009

David Levine July 30, 2009

Hoover Liddell October 24, 2009

Darlene Lim July 29, 2009

Denise Louie September 2, 2009

Henry Louie September 2, 2009

Maria Luz Torre October 19, 2009

Pecolia Manigo August 14, 2009

Eric Mar July 29, 2009

Gordon Mar June 9, 2009

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Andrea Marta September 8, 2009

Miranda Massie August 31, 2009

Kim-Shree Maufas June 5, 2009

Hydra Mendoza October 20, 2009

Michelle Menegaz June 5, 2009

Rachel Norton June 9, 2009

Steve Phillips July 23, 2009

Ellie Rossiter July 28, 2009

Mark Sanchez June 15, 2009

Big-Qu Seeto September 2, 2009

Victor Seeto September 2, 2009

Byron Thurber July 30, 2009

Alex Tom November 3, 2009

Hugh Vasquez June 3, 2009

Mauricio Vela June 18, 2009

Steve Weiner June 2, 2009

Dana Woldow August 5, 2009

Christina Wong February 8, 2010

Lorraine Woodruff-Long September 2, 2009

Jill Wynns June 16, 2009

Norman Yee May 19, 2009

Deena Zacharin September 30, 2009

(Plus thirteen informal interview informants)

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Appendix B. Sample Interview Questions Community Mobilizers Directions. The following questions provide a guide for structuring the interview. In order to preserve a natural conversational flow, it may be necessary to ask questions out of order and to probe new insights as they emerge. Make the appropriate substitution for “organization,” for example, “La Raza Centro Legal.” Parenthesized text is optional if information is available through other sources (e.g., organizational website or annual report).

1. Tell me a little bit about yourself and the work you do with organization.

a. In your own words, what’s the mission of organization? b. (What are the major functions or activities of organization?)

c. What are the major campaigns organization is currently engaged in? d. (When was it founded?)

2. How would you define organization’s constituency?

a. How do you determine the interests of your constituents? -or- What processes are

in place to help organization determine the interests of its constituents? b. How are organizational decisions that impact your constituents made?

3. Help me “map out” the political landscape of student assignment.

a. As you see it, what are the various sides of this debate? b. What motivates each side to engage in the student assignment issue? -or- How

would each side describe the incentive for working on this issue? -or- What are the arguments that arise from the various sides of this debate?

c. Who are the major stakeholders, the key individuals and organizations involved? d. Where do the stakeholders you’ve just identified fit within this landscape? e. Of these stakeholders, which ones are most “powerful”? -or- Which of these

stakeholders are most able to “get things done”? f. What are the different ways stakeholders try to “get things done”?

i. What are the various strategies and tactics these stakeholders employ? ii. Which of these activities are most effective, do you think?

g. Where are the alliances? -or- Which individuals and organizations are aligned with one another (i.e., have similar perspectives on the admissions issue)?

i. Which individuals and organizations are on opposite sides? h. Do the stakeholders involved connect the student assignment issue to other local

education issues? Or to other broader societal issues? Explain.

4. (How has organization been involved in the student assignment issue? )

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5. What’s at stake for organization and its constituents? -or- Why is this an issue for organization to engage in?

a. If we were to poll your constituents, what would they likely say are the ‘pros’

and ‘cons’ of the SFUSD’s assignment policy? b. From the perspective of your constituents and staff, what would an ideal

6. Take a moment to think of a specific example of contention over the student assignment

plan in San Francisco of which you have firsthand knowledge. (It can be anything from a single event to an extended campaign.) Walk me through this example.

a. What happened? b. Why did it happen? c. Who were the stakeholders involved? d. What were the strategies and tactics employed? e. (How) was it resolved?

7. Talk a bit about how the student assignment issue has played out over time, including

both the different tensions and alliances that have played out over time. a. (How) has the issue evolved over the years? b. Which players have become more/less prominent over time? c. How has the debate changed over time?

8. Which community organizations are most involved in public education advocacy over

school admissions?

9. How does education, as an organizational issue, compare with the other substantive issues of organization?

a. For organization, how prominent of an issue is “education”? b. Is “education” an enduring issue or one that is addressed, as needed, from time to

time? c. What are the specific education issues organization is currently engaged in?

10. How does organization go about representing the interests of its constituents to policy

makers? Walk me through this process.

a. How is this work defined? Describe some typical activities -or- What does a typical day or week look like?

b. Describe organization’s interaction with policy makers.

11. Do you have any final thoughts regarding San Francisco’s student assignment policy that you would like to share?

12. Who are some other folks I should be interviewing (for example, local officials and

bureaucrats, community advocates, parents, researchers)?

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Policy Elites 1. Tell me about your work as a job title.

a. What are your main responsibilities?

i. Talk about your role in education policymaking here in San Francisco. b. (How long have you been a job title?) c. What brought you here, to this position? -or- What were you doing before you

started this position?

2. Tell me about the school assignment issue in San Francisco, as you see it.

a. What’s driving the debate? -or- Why has this been a controversial issue? b. (How) has this debate influenced policymaking on student assignments? -or-

How does this contention impact or influence the school district? c. Do you have a specific example of how contention over student assignments

influences education policymaking?

3. Help me “map out” the political landscape of student assignment.

a. As you see it, what are the various sides of this debate? b. What motivates each side to engage in the school assignment issue? -or- How

would each side describe the incentive for working on this issue? -or- What are the arguments that arise from the various sides of this debate?

c. Who are the major stakeholders, the key individuals and organizations involved? d. Where do the stakeholders you’ve just identified fit within this landscape? e. Of these stakeholders, which ones are most “powerful”? -or- Which of these

stakeholders are most able to “get things done”? f. What are the different ways stakeholders try to “get things done”?

i. What are the various strategies and tactics these stakeholders employ? ii. Which of these activities are most effective, do you think?

g. Where are the alliances? -or- Which individuals and organizations are aligned with one another (i.e., have similar perspectives on the admissions issue)?

i. Which individuals and organizations are on opposite sides? h. Do the stakeholders involved connect the student assignment issue to other local

education issues? Or to other broader societal issues? Explain. i. Where would you locate the district (i.e., the superintendent and members of the

board of education) within this landscape?

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4. Take a moment to think of a specific example of contention over the student assignment plan in San Francisco of which you have firsthand knowledge. (It can be anything from a single event to an extended campaign.) Walk me through this example.

a. What happened? b. Why did it happen? c. Who were the stakeholders involved? d. What were the strategies and tactics employed? e. (How) was it resolved?

5. Talk a bit about how the issue of student assignment has played out over time, including

both the different tensions and alliances that have played out over time.

d. (How) has the issue evolved over the years? e. Which players have become more/less prominent over time? f. How has the debate changed over time?

6. What are the contextual factors that make the district unique compared to other urban

districts and their student assignment policy?

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Appendix C. Selected Studies on desegregation in San Francisco.

Author(s) Year Title Conclusions/Findings

Weiner 1979 Participation, Deadlines, and Choice (See also: Weiner, S. (1972). Educational decisions in an organized anarchy. PhD Dissertation, Stanford University.)

Court-imposed deadlines and choice opportunities favored white women. This resulted in the selection of a less than ideal desegregation plan.

Kirp 1982 Just Schools: The Idea of Racial Equality in American Education. Chapter 6: San Francisco: Multitudes in the Valley of Indecision

Examines interplay of federal and local decision making and the increase in minority participation. Supreme Court rulings on school desegregation have provided an opportunity for political resolutions to race and school problems.

Fine 1986 When Leadership Fails: Desegregation and Demoralization in the San Francisco Schools

In Fine’s examination of San Francisco schools (1960-1980), she concludes that it is a failure of leadership and not the policy of desegregation that has led to such disappointing results. Fine identifies six dimensions of failure that occurred in the school board, district administration, and courts.

Der 1994 Clash Between Race-Conscious Remedies and Merit: School Desegregation and the San Francisco Chinese American Community

The 1983 Consent Decree has not disproportionately impacted Chinese students in the areas of school choice, access to alternative schools, or association with high achieving students. Of concern, however, is the finding that economic status and neighborhood determine which students (within a specific minority group) achieve access to academic excellence.

Dong 1995 “Too Many Asians”: The Challenge of Fighting Discrimination against Asian Americans and Preserving Affirmative Action

Explicates a legal strategy for Ho plaintiffs that will both preserve preferential admissions programs for non-Chinese minority groups and provide a rationale for protecting minority groups (including Chinese Americans) from treatment worse than that afforded whites.

Ming 1997 Desegregation in a Diverse and Competitive Environment: Admission at Lowell High School

The uniqueness of Lowell High School is such that the “the usual tools of desegregation do not function well for achieving integration.” Rather than the desegregation plan specified by the 1983 Consent Decree, Ming argues that Lowell should operate under an affirmative action plan similar to that used by higher education.

Fraga, Erlichson, & Lee

1998 Consensus Building and School Reform: The Role of the Courts in San Francisco

Twin goals of enrollment desegregation and academic achievement require persistent court oversight and stakeholder consensus.

Ruiz de Velasco

1998 The Politics of Education in Court-Ordered School Districts: School Reform in San Francisco

The mature court-ordered regime (1993-1997) is observed to increase information available to the public, creates a forum for and encourages coalition building on controversial issues.

Tacorda 2003 Acknowledging Those Stubborn Facts of History: The Vestiges of Segregation.

Commentary advocating for a broader reading of Board of Education v. Dowell. The two-part test to determine unitary status developed by the Supreme Court have been applied too narrowly. Specifically argues that the definition of ‘vestige’ should be broadened.

Der 2004 Resegregation and the Achievement Gap: Challenges to San Francisco School Desegregation

SFUSD has achieved only limited success at desegregating its schools. The “forces of resegregation” may be too difficult to overcome. Furthermore, additional state funds has not closed the achievement gap. Therefore, SFUSD must determine how “parental choice can be leveraged to build strong community schools” (p. 315).

Fraga, Rodriguez, & Erlichson

2005 Desegregation and School Board Politics: The Limits of Court-Imposed Policy Change

Board factions can work either in support of or opposed to directives issued by federal courts. “It is teachers, administrators, and especially superintendents, as directed by school boards, who ultimately have the responsibility for making policy changes work” (p. 124).

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App

endi

x D

. Cou

rt-Su

perv

ised

Stu

dent

Ass

ignm

ent i

n Sa

n Fr

anci

sco.

Epi

sode

s of c

omm

unity

mob

iliza

tion.

E

PISO

DE

Pr

elud

e PA

RT

ON

E: 1

971-

198

3 PA

RT

TWO

: 198

3- 2

005

Epi

logu

e

Loc

al la

wsu

its

Broc

k v.

Boa

rd o

f Edu

catio

n (1

962)

. Jo

hnso

n v.

SFU

SD (1

971)

; O’N

eil

v. S

FUSD

(197

2); S

FNAA

CP

v.

SFU

SD (1

978)

.

Ho

v. S

FUSD

(199

4).

Supr

eme

Cou

rt C

ases

Br

own

v. B

oard

of E

duca

tion

(195

4); G

reen

v. C

ount

y Sc

hool

Bo

ard

of N

ew K

ent C

ount

y (1

968)

Swan

n v.

Cha

rlotte

-Mec

klen

berg

(1

971)

; Key

es v

. Sch

ool D

istr

ict N

o.

1 (1

973)

.

Boar

d of

Edu

catio

n v.

Dow

ell,

(199

1); F

reem

an v

. Pitt

s (19

92);

Mis

sour

i v. J

enki

ns (1

995)

Pare

nts I

nvol

ved

in C

omm

unity

Sc

hool

s v. S

eattl

e (2

007)

Stud

ent E

nrol

lmen

t (p

erce

nt)

19

65

19

71

Bla

ck:

25.6

30.0

C

hine

se:

13.3

13.9

W

hite

: 45

.3

31

.9

Latin

o:

11.5

13

.8

19

71

19

83

Bla

ck:

30.0

22.5

C

hine

se:

13.9

19.9

W

hite

: 31

.9

17

.0

Latin

o:

13.8

19.9

19

83

20

05

Bla

ck:

22.5

13.7

C

hine

se:

19.9

31.6

W

hite

: 17

.0

9

.5

Latin

o:

19.9

22

.0

20

05

20

10

Bla

ck:

13.7

10.4

C

hine

se:

31.6

32.7

W

hite

: 9.

5

11.

3 La

tino:

22

.0

23.3

Prom

inen

t St

akeh

olde

rs

SFN

AA

CP,

CO

RE,

Cou

ncil

for

Civ

ic U

nity

, Citi

zens

Com

mitt

ee

for N

eigh

borh

ood

Scho

ols

SFN

AA

CP,

MA

LDEF

, Alia

nza,

B

ayvi

ew H

unte

rs P

oint

C

oord

inat

ing

Educ

atio

nal

Com

mitt

ee &

Coa

litio

n.

Ho,

SFN

AA

CP,

CA

DC

MET

A,

CA

A, A

ALF

, PPS

-SF,

Par

ents

for

Nei

ghbo

rhoo

d Sc

hool

s, B

AM

N.

PPS-

SF, P

aren

t Adv

isor

y C

ounc

il.

Stud

ent A

ssig

nmen

t N

eigh

borh

ood

syst

em o

f stu

dent

as

sign

men

t bas

ed o

n ca

tchm

ent

zone

s of c

ontig

uous

are

a.

Edu

catio

nal E

qual

ity/Q

ualit

y.

Educ

atio

n co

mpl

exes

(Par

k So

uth,

R

ichm

ond)

cou

pled

with

effo

rts to

im

prov

e ac

adem

ic a

chie

vem

ent.

Hor

sesh

oe. D

ivid

es th

e di

stric

t int

o se

ven

zone

s. El

emen

tary

stud

ent

assi

gnm

ent o

ccur

s with

in z

ones

by

mai

ntai

ning

±15

per

cent

age

poin

ts of

a su

bgro

up’s

dis

trict

wid

e to

tal.

Ope

ratio

n In

tegr

ate.

Ext

ends

de

segr

egat

ion

to se

cond

ary

grad

es

with

a sy

stem

of f

eede

r sch

ools

ba

sed

on H

orse

shoe

.

Edu

catio

nal R

edes

ign.

At l

east

fo

ur su

bgro

ups r

epre

sent

ed in

eve

ry

scho

ol. E

nrol

lmen

t cap

s of 4

0/45

pe

rcen

t for

eac

h su

bgro

up.

Con

sent

Dec

ree

(Pha

se I)

. M

aint

ains

enr

ollm

ent c

aps o

f Ed

ucat

iona

l Red

esig

n. S

peci

al p

lan

for B

ayvi

ew-H

unte

rs P

oint

.

Con

sent

Dec

ree

(Pha

se II

). R

acia

l cl

assi

ficat

ions

elim

inat

ed w

ith

1999

/200

1 H

o se

ttlem

ents

.

Div

ersi

ty In

dex

Lotte

ry. S

choo

l ch

oice

con

stra

ined

by

a lo

ttery

sy

stem

for o

vers

ubsc

ribed

scho

ols

that

cre

ates

div

ersi

ty th

roug

h a

set

of ra

ce-n

eutra

l ind

icat

ors.

Div

ersi

ty In

dex

Lotte

ry. I

n pl

ace

(with

min

or a

men

dmen

ts) t

hrou

gh

the

2010

-201

1 sc

hool

yea

r.

A n

ew st

uden

t ass

ignm

ent s

yste

m

of sc

hool

cho

ice

for t

he 2

011-

2012

sc

hool

yea

r. Pr

efer

ence

s giv

en to

si

blin

gs, a

pplic

ants

cho

osin

g ne

ighb

orho

od sc

hool

s, an

d ap

plic

ants

from

cen

sus t

ract

s with

lo

wer

ach

ievi

ng st

uden

ts.

323

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Appendix E

. Major D

ata Sources and Uses

Data Source

Description

Scope∗

How

data were used in analysis

Organizational R

ecords

Bancroft Library, U

niversity of California,

Berkeley

SFNA

AC

P. Unprocessed docum

ents produced in preparation for trial (SFN

AACP v. SFU

SD). Includes files from

Johnson v. SFU

SD.

1970s- 1980s 7 cartons

To identify how student assignm

ent was

understood and framed by SFN

AA

CP

mem

bers; To track the evolution of SFN

AA

CP’s legal strategy for student

assignment from

the early 1970s to the early 1980s.

NA

AC

P, Western R

egional Files 1970s-1980s A

pproximately 3 boxes

To locate SFNA

AC

P’s tactics within the

national NA

AC

P’s strategy.

H

im M

ark Lai Collection. M

aterials pertaining to integration, desegregation, and affirm

ative action, articles from

Chinese Tim

es, and documents related to

the Chinese for A

ffirmative A

ction (C

AA

), Chinese A

merican D

emocratic

Club (C

AD

C), C

hinese Progressive A

ssociation (CPA), and the O

rganization of C

hinese Am

ericans (OC

A).

1970s- 1980s 21 folders containing m

iscellaneous papers and new

spaper clippings.

To understand how desegregation and

integration was understood and fram

ed by C

hinese Am

ericans, primarily in the 1970s

and 1980s.

Ethnic Studies Library, University of

California, B

erkeley R

ecords of CA

A, C

AD

C, and CPA

.

1970s- 1990s D

ozens of annual reports, new

sletters, annual banquet program

s, and other m

iscellaneous documents.

To identify how student assignm

ent was

understood and framed by C

AD

C, CPA

, C

AA

mem

bers. To identify how student

assignment fit into the broader vision,

mission, and goals of these organizations.

∗ N

umbers denote records review

ed, not total size of archive.

324

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Dat

a So

urce

D

escr

iptio

n

Scop

e∗

How

dat

a w

ere

used

in a

naly

sis

Cal

iforn

ia E

thni

c an

d M

ultic

ultu

ral A

rchi

ves,

Dav

idso

n Li

brar

y, U

nive

rsity

of C

alifo

rnia

, Sa

nta

Bar

bara

Rec

ords

of C

hine

se A

mer

ican

Dem

ocra

tic

Clu

b an

d Ch

ines

e A

mer

ican

Vot

er

Educ

atio

n Fu

nd

1980

s-19

90s

To id

entif

y ho

w st

uden

t ass

ignm

ent w

as

unde

rsto

od a

nd fr

amed

by

CA

DC

and

C

AV

EC m

embe

rs.

Spec

ial C

olle

ctio

ns, S

tanf

ord

Uni

vers

ity

MA

LDEF

19

70s-

1980

s ~

4 ca

rtons

To

iden

tify

how

stud

ent a

ssig

nmen

t was

un

ders

tood

and

fram

ed b

y M

ALD

EF a

nd a

ha

ndfu

l of o

ther

org

aniz

atio

ns w

ith L

atin

o co

nstit

uent

s.

Fed

eral

Dis

tric

t Cou

rt R

ecor

ds

Nat

iona

l Arc

hive

s and

Rec

ords

A

dmin

istra

tion,

Pac

ific

Reg

ion.

John

son

v. S

FUSD

19

69-1

970s

~

6 bo

xes

To id

entif

y ho

w H

orse

shoe

and

Ope

ratio

n In

tegr

ate

wer

e co

nstit

uted

; To

loca

te

John

son

with

in c

onte

mpo

rary

des

egre

gatio

n ju

rispr

uden

ce.

Fe

dera

l Rec

ords

Cen

ter,

San

Bru

no,

Cal

iforn

ia

SFN

AAC

P v.

SFU

SD

19

78-2

005

24 b

oxes

con

tain

ing

1,49

8 do

cket

fil

es.

To id

entif

y ho

w st

uden

t ass

ignm

ent w

as

fram

ed, u

nder

stoo

d, a

nd sh

aped

by

vario

us

inst

itutio

nal,

orga

niza

tiona

l, an

d in

divi

dual

st

akeh

olde

rs.

Ho

v. S

FUSD

1994

-200

5 7

boxe

s con

tain

ing

721

dock

et

files

. Tog

ethe

r with

SFN

AA

CP,

ge

nera

ted

181

singl

e-sp

aced

pa

ges o

f not

es a

nd ~

100

page

s of

phot

ocop

ied

reco

rds.

To id

entif

y ho

w st

uden

t ass

ignm

ent w

as

fram

ed, u

nder

stoo

d, a

nd sh

aped

by

vario

us

inst

itutio

nal,

orga

niza

tiona

l, an

d in

divi

dual

st

akeh

olde

rs.

325

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Data Source

Description

Scope∗

How

data were used in analysis

San Francisco U

nified School District R

ecords

Hoover Institution A

rchives, Stanford U

niversity M

iscellaneous Papers of Robert F. A

lioto 1975-1985 1 carton

To understand how the Superintendent

framed Educational R

edesign specifically, and desegregation and integration generally.

Daniel E. K

oshland San Francisco History

Center, San Francisco M

ain Library

San Francisco Unified School D

istrict R

ecords; Individual Files 1960s-2000 10 cartons

To identify how SFU

SD leadership fram

ed and understood the student assignm

ent issue.

San Francisco Main Library

Consent D

ecree New

sletters (New

Views

& The Insider), D

istrict reports, etc.

To understand how

the SFUSD

framed the

consent decree, integration, desegregation, and diversity to San Francisco parents.

San Francisco Unified School D

istrict B

oard of Education Meeting m

inutes

1999-2005

To identify school board resolutions pertaining to student assignm

ent policy.

Mainstream

and Com

munity N

ewspapers.

806 relevant articles, letters to the editor, and op-eds.

San Francisco C

hronicle 393 records.

To understand how student assignm

ent was

framed and understood by stakeholders; To

understand how the m

ainstream m

edia assessed student assignm

ent; To trace the history of student assignm

ent, including the sequence of events at the court house and in board cham

bers.

O

ther English Language Papers (San Francisco Sun-Reporter, San Francisco Exam

iner, San Francisco Independent, N

ew York Tim

es, EducationWeek,

AsianWeek, D

aily Journal, and others )

215 records.

To understand how student assignm

ent was

framed and understood by stakeholders,

including African A

merican, A

sian A

merican com

munities.

326

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Dat

a So

urce

D

escr

iptio

n

Scop

e∗

How

dat

a w

ere

used

in a

naly

sis

Sing

Tao

Dai

ly a

nd C

hine

se T

imes

19

8 re

cord

s.

To u

nder

stan

d po

litic

al rh

etor

ic a

nd a

ctio

n on

stud

ent a

ssig

nmen

t of l

ocal

Chi

nese

A

mer

ican

com

mun

ity.

In

form

ant I

nter

view

s. 67

sem

i-stru

ctur

ed,

open

-end

ed fo

rmal

inte

rvie

ws;

12

info

rmal

in

terv

iew

s (co

nduc

ted

2009

-201

0)

Ex

ecut

ive

staf

f, bo

ard

mem

bers

, and

pa

rent

lead

ers f

rom

org

aniz

atio

ns in

volv

ed

in e

duca

tion

advo

cacy

and

/or s

tude

nt

assi

gnm

ent i

n Sa

n Fr

anci

sco.

40 fo

rmal

inte

rvie

ws;

8

info

rmal

inte

rvie

ws.

Num

bers

do

not

incl

ude

scho

ol b

oard

m

embe

rs w

ho w

ere

advo

cate

s or

pare

nt le

ader

s prio

r to

thei

r el

ectio

n.

To p

robe

loca

l pol

itica

l lan

dsca

pe o

f stu

dent

as

sign

men

t dur

ing

vario

us p

erio

ds o

f tim

e.

Sc

hool

boa

rd m

embe

rs.

17 fo

rmal

inte

rvie

ws;

1

info

rmal

inte

rvie

w.

To u

nder

stan

d po

litic

al d

ynam

ics o

f San

Fr

anci

sco’

s stu

dent

ass

ignm

ent p

lans

, loc

al

scho

ol d

eseg

rega

tion

law

suits

, and

ne

ighb

orho

od a

nd ra

ce re

latio

ns fr

om lo

cal

polic

y-el

ite p

ersp

ectiv

e .

A

ttorn

eys i

nvol

ved

with

San

Fra

ncis

co

scho

ol d

eseg

rega

tion

law

suits

and

cou

rt-ap

poin

ted

mon

itors

/exp

erts

.

6 fo

rmal

inte

rvie

ws;

2

info

rmal

inte

rvie

ws.

To u

nder

stan

d le

gal s

trate

gy,

To c

aptu

re th

e eb

b an

d flo

w o

f loc

al sc

hool

de

segr

egat

ion

law

suits

. To

loca

te lo

cal

law

suits

with

in b

road

er ju

rispr

uden

ce.

Perti

nent

seni

or sc

hool

dis

trict

staf

f. 4

form

al in

terv

iew

s;

1 in

form

al in

terv

iew

.

To c

aptu

re

327

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Appendix F. C

ultural Characterizations of Integration, C

hoice, and Neighborhood.

Episode of M

obilization L

ogic of Action

Cultural C

haracterization Illustrative D

ata

1971-1983. SF

NA

AC

P v. SFU

SD

Integration B

ipolar Desegregation

Rhetorical.

MA

LDEF: “O

n its face, the Decree addresses alm

ost exclusively the specific needs of B

lack students within the San Francisco U

nified School District and offers specific

remedies to those students: specific school curriculum

enrichment program

s, boundary changes, academ

ic feeder patterns, and the like. In contrast, the only provisions from

which H

ispanic students are likely to benefit are on the very vague “we-w

ill-not-discrim

inate-and-will-provide-quality-education-to-all-students” variety” (D

F272). . . M

argery Levy: When m

onitoring the desegregation of schools, programs and

classrooms, I believe it is essential that the C

ourt hold the SFUSD

to the spirit of this C

onsent Decree and not perm

it the SFUSD

to maintain all non-w

hite schools. . . To me,

this in no way is in the spirit of the C

onsent Decree calling for system

-wide

desegregation. (Filed 2/7/83; DF 284; Fairness H

earing February 14, 1983) C

ognitive. SFN

AA

CP: The defendants have suggested a new

standard, by means of w

hich a school w

ould be desegregated so long as it contained no more than 45%

of one racial/ethnic group and no few

er than four racial/ethnic groups in the enrollment. B

y this definition, as pointed out in the com

plaint (see , pages 19-21), and desegregation order of this C

ourt), the defendants will effectively rescind the desegregation order of this Court;

will im

mediately resegregate schools effectively and peacefully desegregated by the

prior orders of this Court; w

ill create pockets of racial identifiability within the SFU

SD

based solely on the known patterns of residential segregation w

ithin the City.

MA

LDEF: “The class should be redefined to include only those persons w

hom

plaintiffs ‘individual Black parents, proceeding on behalf of their ow

n children, and the San Francisco branch of the N

AA

CP, a civil rights organization w

hich represents its m

embers’, sought to represent from

the inception of this litigation until mid-1982 or

later (DF272).

328

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Epi

sode

of M

obili

zatio

n L

ogic

of A

ctio

n C

ultu

ral C

hara

cter

izat

ion

Illu

stra

tive

Dat

a W

eige

l: Th

e la

w is

settl

ed th

at sc

hool

aut

horit

ies v

iola

te th

e Co

nstit

utio

n by

ass

igni

ng

blac

k te

ache

rs a

nd te

ache

rs o

f lim

ited

expe

rienc

e to

“bl

ack”

scho

ols w

hile

ass

igni

ng

few

, if a

ny, s

uch

teac

hers

to “

whi

te”

scho

ols.

Bru

nwas

ser:

Our

cas

e w

as b

roug

ht fo

r bla

ck k

ids,

a cl

ass a

ctio

n… so

, it w

as th

eir r

ight

s th

at w

ere

prim

arily

invo

lved

. (In

terv

iew

, Arth

ur B

runw

asse

r, Ja

nuar

y 27

, 201

0).

Atk

ins:

[In

1978

, arg

uing

for t

he d

efen

se o

f Hor

sesh

oe in

the

face

of E

duca

tiona

l R

edes

ign]

“[T

he d

ecis

ion]

mus

t be

defe

nded

aga

inst

any

effo

rts to

dilu

te it

s vita

lity

or

the

inte

grity

of t

he d

eseg

rega

tion

orde

r whi

ch it

effe

cted

in th

e fa

ll of

197

1.”

Con

stitu

tive.

H

orse

shoe

: The

func

tion

of H

orse

shoe

and

then

Ope

ratio

n In

tegr

ate

was

to e

nsur

e a

roug

hly

equi

vale

nt ra

tio o

f whi

tes t

o bl

acks

in e

very

zon

e an

d ev

ery

scho

ol. C

hine

se

and

Latin

o stu

dent

s wer

e in

cide

ntal

ly a

ssig

ned

(see

Eva

luat

ion

Rep

ort 1

976)

. “T

he c

urre

nt R

acia

l/Eth

nic

Cla

ssifi

catio

n us

ed b

y th

e D

istri

ct is

in tw

o m

ain

cate

gorie

s—W

hite

and

Non

whi

te—

with

the

follo

win

g cl

assi

ficat

ions

und

er e

ach:

” (D

F12)

W

iege

l: “S

egre

gatio

n” m

eans

, in

refe

renc

e to

any

gro

up o

r cla

ss o

f per

sons

, tha

t the

ra

tio o

f whi

tes t

o bl

acks

in th

at g

roup

or c

lass

is su

bsta

ntia

lly a

t var

ianc

e w

ith th

e ra

tio

of w

hite

chi

ldre

n to

bla

ck c

hild

ren

in th

e to

tal p

opul

atio

n of

the

scho

ols (

p.15

. M

emor

andu

m o

f Dec

isio

n, 7

/9/7

1)

M

ultip

olar

Inte

grat

ion

Rhe

tori

cal.

Álio

to: “

At t

he fo

unda

tion

of th

e R

edes

ign

fram

ewor

k is

the

scho

ol d

istri

ct’s

co

mm

itmen

t to

inte

grat

ion.

Thi

s inv

olve

s ass

igni

ng st

uden

ts o

f div

erse

raci

al g

roup

s to

crea

te m

ultic

ultu

ral c

omm

uniti

es w

ithin

scho

ols”

(ER

Pro

posa

l, p.

2).

329

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Episode of M

obilization L

ogic of Action

Cultural C

haracterization Illustrative D

ata C

ognitive. B

lack plaintiffs, by and through these counsel, have been certified to represent a class consisting of all students and their parents in a num

ber of other school desegregation cases.” [O

pposing motion to intervene] (D

F220). A

lioto: “In the late 1960s new im

migrants from

Southeast Asia, the Philippines and

South and Central A

merican began m

igrating to San Francisco. At the sam

e time there

was a decline in the San Francisco birthrate. This has resulted in a student enrollm

ent in w

hich there is no longer a predominant racial/ethnic group. These facts m

ust be considered w

hen looking at the racial/ethnic balance of our schools” (ER, p. 21).

Constitutive.

Educational Redesign redefined a racially balanced school as one in w

hich “no ethnic or racial group…

constitute[s] a majority” in student enrollm

ent (BA

NC

MSS 84/175c

Carton 101, “R

eport: An educational redesign for the SFU

SD: A

proposal for consideration, 1-6-76

Neighborhood

R

hetorical. B

rown: “W

e always have to trade off and our children are not happy w

here they are going. W

hites don’t want to com

e here, and we can’t care less. B

ut now they are focing

us to their schools.” (The fight to reopen Drew

. San Francisco Sun-Reporter, Septem

ber 14, 1983). Jam

es: “Why should w

e bused to your schools when w

e have good schools here? Why

should we bused to your schools w

hile none of your kids are bused here to ours?” (W

hat people say about S.F. school plan. San Francisco Chronicle, January 18, 1978) (C

ounter) SFNA

AC

P: “Despite the efforts of these defendants to som

ehow suggest that

racial segregation might be a preferred or better m

ode of schooling for the black children at H

unters Point, it is clear that such arguments have been singularly

unpersuasive in the federal courts” SFNAAC

P v. SFUSD

(DF9; 8/14/78).

330

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Epi

sode

of M

obili

zatio

n L

ogic

of A

ctio

n C

ultu

ral C

hara

cter

izat

ion

Illu

stra

tive

Dat

a C

ogni

tive.

G

loria

R. D

avis

: “Th

e m

ajor

ity o

f Bla

ck p

aren

ts in

the

Bay

view

-Hun

ters

Poi

nt

com

mun

ity a

re a

dam

ant i

n th

eir r

esis

tanc

e to

any

bus

ing

of o

ur c

hild

ren

away

from

ne

ighb

orho

od sc

hool

s” (D

F242

) C

onst

itutiv

e.

The

neig

hbor

hood

pat

tern

of s

choo

ls h

as b

een

in e

xist

ence

in S

an F

ranc

isco

sinc

e 19

36

(Bre

yer,

DF1

00)

Hor

sesh

oe a

dopt

ed a

syst

em o

f zon

es “

to h

elp

reta

in a

feel

ing

of a

nei

ghbo

rhoo

d” a

nd

livin

g on

the

sam

e sq

uare

blo

ck (a

nd in

the

sam

e gr

ade)

wou

ld b

e se

nt to

the

sam

e sc

hool

. Ed

ucat

iona

l Red

esig

n ca

me

at th

is fr

om th

e ot

her d

irect

ion,

by

star

ting

with

the

pre-

Hor

sesh

oe n

eigh

borh

ood

area

s and

bus

ing

in fr

om fe

eder

are

as if

nec

essa

ry.

C

hoic

e Il

legi

timat

e

Rhe

tori

cal.

SFN

AA

CP:

The

def

enda

nts h

ave

offe

red

disc

redi

ted

“Fre

edom

of C

hoic

e” p

lans

by

mea

ns o

f whi

ch th

e bu

rden

of d

eseg

rega

ting

thes

e sc

hool

s will

be

plac

ed u

pon

the

very

vi

ctim

s of t

he p

ast i

llega

l mis

cond

uct o

f the

se o

ffici

als,

the

stud

ents

(DF9

). Le

vy: T

he S

FUSD

cre

atio

n of

var

ious

pol

icie

s of e

xcep

tions

for o

ptio

nal e

nrol

lmen

t pe

rmits

has

his

toric

ally

don

e th

e gr

eate

st d

amag

e to

the

effe

ctiv

e im

plem

enta

tion

of S

an

Fran

cisc

o de

segr

egat

ion

plan

s tha

n an

y ot

her f

acto

r. C

ogni

tive.

Th

e Te

mpo

rary

Atte

ndan

ce P

erm

it (T

AP)

was

wid

ely

unde

rsto

od a

nd e

xplo

ited

as a

lo

opho

le fo

r fam

ilies

unh

appy

with

thei

r ass

ignm

ent.

331

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Episode of M

obilization L

ogic of Action

Cultural C

haracterization Illustrative D

ata C

heng: “Some of the things I listened to w

ere asthma problem

s. I remem

ber there were

some com

plaints of motion sickness.” (Im

plying that complaints w

ere at times trivial or

not relevant). (DF180, D

eposition of Albert C

heng). C

onstitutive. SFN

AA

CP: C

losing TAP loopholes w

as a settlement condition for O

’Neil. O

peration Integrate w

ould be “worthless” otherw

ise.

Legitim

ate R

hetorical. O

ER: is the SFU

SD’s “prim

ary voluntary desegregation” effort (Local Defendants

1984-1985 annual report) C

ognitive. In closing, I w

ould like to call attention of the court to the needs of parents and students for self determ

ination and the ability to make choices w

hich affect their lives. And

while those choices m

ust be governed by need for desegregation, they have to be educational choices at all tim

es.” (Filed 2/4/83, Written statem

ent of position of Myra

G. K

opf; Box 2, D

ocket File 268) C

onstitutive. TA

P established to provide relief for students with just cause. “A

s of 1977, the most

frequent reason for granting transfers was attendance at an alternative school, but

transfers also were granted for m

iscellaneous issues such as change of address, “special problem

s,” bilingual, English as a Second Language, and other language issues, special education program

s and more.” (B

arfield, DF1231).

OER

:”One of the goals of Educational R

edesign is to provide more educational options

for students. The student assignment proposal is designed to provide an opportunity for

students to choose the program w

hich best suits their needs.”

332

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Epi

sode

of M

obili

zatio

n L

ogic

of A

ctio

n C

ultu

ral C

hara

cter

izat

ion

Illu

stra

tive

Dat

a Ed

ucat

iona

l Red

esig

n: “

prov

ide

mor

e ed

ucat

iona

l opt

ions

for s

tude

nts.

The

stud

ent

assi

gnm

ent p

ropo

sal i

s des

igne

d to

pro

vide

an

oppo

rtuni

ty fo

r stu

dent

s to

choo

se th

e pr

ogra

m w

hich

bes

t sui

ts th

eir n

eeds

.” (E

R p

.23)

1983

-200

5.

Ho

v. S

FU

SD

Inte

grat

ion

Rac

e-co

nsci

ous I

nteg

ratio

n

Rhe

tori

cal.

Am

mia

no: I

nteg

ratio

n is

not

a B

lack

/Whi

te is

sue

in th

is C

ity. C

hang

ing

dem

ogra

phic

s, th

e w

ave

of im

mig

ratio

n, a

nd a

stro

nom

ical

hou

sing

cos

ts h

ave

all i

mpa

cted

the

scho

ols.

(DF7

60).

Fa: “

In si

tuat

ions

like

the

SFU

SD w

here

ther

e ar

e th

ree

maj

or m

inor

ity g

roup

s… e

ach

grou

p sh

ould

be

give

n an

equ

al v

oice

in a

nyth

ing

as im

porta

nt a

s the

Con

sent

Dec

ree”

(D

F761

). W

an: “

The

educ

atio

nal n

egle

ct su

ffere

d by

my

child

ren

and

othe

r Asi

an a

nd im

mig

rant

st

uden

ts is

in m

any

way

s sim

ilar t

o th

e hi

stor

ical

abu

se e

xper

ienc

ed b

y A

frica

n A

mer

ican

chi

ldre

n, b

ut th

e ne

eds o

f my

child

ren

also

diff

er a

s a re

sult

of d

iffer

ence

s in

lang

uage

and

cul

ture

” (D

F715

) C

ogni

tive.

R

onal

d C

ruz:

I be

lieve

race

mus

t con

tinue

to b

e co

nsid

ered

if th

ere

is to

be

any

hope

of

equa

lity

and

inte

grat

ion

in th

e sc

hool

s. A

cker

man

: “H

ow c

an y

ou lo

ok a

t div

ersi

ty w

ithou

t con

side

ring

race

? W

e be

lieve

we

will

ach

ieve

real

div

ersi

ty b

y us

ing

the

othe

r fac

tors

. Rac

e w

ill b

e us

ed o

nly

as n

eede

d.”

Con

stitu

tive.

O

rric

k: “

The

subj

ect m

atte

r of t

his c

ase…

[is]

the

dese

greg

atio

n of

the

scho

ols w

ith

resp

ect t

o al

l rac

es.”

(DF7

74; 7

/23/

93).

1983

Con

sent

Dec

ree,

PN

SAP,

and

initi

al A

cker

man

pla

n al

l use

d ra

cial

cla

ssifi

catio

ns

to a

ssig

n st

uden

ts to

scho

ols.

333

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Episode of M

obilization L

ogic of Action

Cultural C

haracterization Illustrative D

ata R

ace-neutral Diversity

Rhetorical.

Louie: While A

ALF and I also em

brace diversity and firmly believe that diversity

enriches our lives. . . The District’s contention that diversity w

ill result in academic

excellence is not supported by either experience or pedagogy (DF1251)

Loen: “By treating people as m

embers of racial groups rather than as individuals w

ith the sam

e rights before the law, the consent decree has dashed the hopes of children.”

Cognitive.

Cheng: “B

ut being subjected to higher standards because of my race w

asn’t enough. Even w

orse was having the school district hierarchy tell m

e that the discrimination w

as not only legal, but, in fact, a good thing. That w

as my first encounter w

ith institutional racism

.” C

onstitutive. Follow

ing the default plan, the Diversity Index Lottery w

as implem

ented in 2002. A set

of race-neutral “diversity” indicators was used to create diverse schools in situations

where there w

ere more applicants than seats available.

“The SFUSD

shall not use or include race or ethnicity as a criterion or factor to assign any student to any school class, classroom

, or program, and shall not use race or

ethnicity as a primary or predom

inant consideration in setting any such criteria or factors” (2001 Settlem

ent).

Choice

Ancillary

Rhetorical.

Biegel: Too often, it is the parents w

ith more m

oney and more tim

e who can obtain

additional information regarding the O

ER process and alternative schools in general.

These realities raise issues of equal access that cannot and should not be ignored.”

334

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Epi

sode

of M

obili

zatio

n L

ogic

of A

ctio

n C

ultu

ral C

hara

cter

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ion

Illu

stra

tive

Dat

a C

onst

itutiv

e.

A sp

ecia

l pro

visi

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f the

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sent

dec

ree

gave

stud

ents

resi

ding

in B

ayvi

ew-H

unte

rs

Poin

t an

optio

n to

atte

nd a

ny o

ther

scho

ol in

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dist

rict,

with

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spor

tatio

n pr

ovid

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rder

to a

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an

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rnat

rive

scho

ol o

r a tr

aditi

onal

scho

ol o

ther

than

wha

t was

as

sign

ed, s

tude

nts w

ere

requ

ired

to c

ompl

ete

an O

ptio

nal E

nrol

lmen

t Req

uest

. Pr

oble

ms w

ith p

aren

ts g

amin

g th

e sy

stem

rem

aine

d. F

ollo

win

g th

e fir

st se

vera

l yea

rs o

f th

e co

nsen

t dec

ree,

dis

trict

beg

an to

rese

greg

ate,

par

tly d

ue to

lax

enfo

rcem

ent o

f OER

.

Cen

tral

R

heto

rica

l. C

han:

I re

ques

t tha

t you

ext

end

the

use

of th

e di

vers

ity in

dex.

My

fam

ily li

ve in

a n

on-

wea

lthy

area

and

the

scor

e of

all

the

neig

hbor

hood

scho

ols a

re n

ot v

ery

high

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s be

caus

e of

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dive

rsity

inde

x th

at m

y so

n ca

n ge

t in

a ve

ry g

ood

prim

ary

and

mid

dle

scho

ol (D

F146

6)

Cog

nitiv

e.

Hal

lade

y: “

I met

peo

ple

all o

ver t

he c

ity w

ho re

ally

wan

ted

to h

ave

choi

ces.

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actu

ally

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nged

, rea

lly c

hang

ed m

y po

sitio

n a

lot o

nce

I got

to k

now

mor

e ab

out t

he

subj

ect.”

C

onst

itutiv

e.

By

the

1991

-199

2 te

rm, n

early

forty

per

cent

of a

ll SF

USD

stud

ents

wer

e on

opt

iona

l en

rollm

ent p

erm

its, a

ttend

ing

a sc

hool

oth

er th

an th

eir d

esig

nate

d sc

hool

. “Th

ese

num

bers

atte

st to

the

mag

nitu

de o

f the

Dis

trict

’s p

rogr

am o

f allo

win

g m

axim

um st

uden

t an

d fa

mily

cho

ice

with

in d

eseg

rega

tion

guid

elin

es.”

(SFU

SD 1

992

annu

al re

port

to th

e co

urt).

D

iver

sity

Inde

x Lo

ttery

. “SF

USD

mai

ntai

ns a

n en

rollm

ent p

roce

ss th

at e

nabl

es p

aren

ts

to e

xpre

ss p

refe

renc

es re

gard

ing

whi

ch sc

hool

s, in

add

ition

to th

eir a

ttend

ance

are

a sc

hool

, the

y w

ould

like

thei

r chi

ld to

atte

nd”

(Exc

elle

nce

for A

ll, p

. 97)

.

335

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Episode of M

obilization L

ogic of Action

Cultural C

haracterization Illustrative D

ata

Neighborhood

R

hetorical. H

enry Louie: District [] should not run counter to w

idely held and proven pedagogy for educational achievem

ent and excellence: parental choice and parental and comm

unity involvem

ent in our children’s education. (DF1251)*

Cognitive.

Naom

i Gray and other prom

inent comm

unity activists argued for the dissolution of the consent decree because so little had been accom

plished to improve the quality of

schools in the neighborhood. A

ckerman: “It's a sort of bread and butter issue—

it's like apple pie and the Am

erican w

ay. You say neighborhood schools, and it resonates w

ith everybody” (S.F. parents rekindle desegregation debate, San Francisco C

hronicle, October 7, 2003).

Grabow

ski: “The simplest thing to do is not going to be the best thing for kids, in the

board’s opinion and in my opinion. R

ight? Neighborhood schools” (Interview

, Ruth

Grabow

ski, June 16, 2009). C

onstitutive. C

SIP, STAR

and Dream

initiatives recognized the difficulty of improving academ

ic achievem

ent through student assignment. R

esources were devoted to schools in the east

side neighborhoods of the Mission, B

ayview-H

unters Point, Visitacion V

alley, and others.

336

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337

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Government Archives

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